Hi François,
pin...@iro.umontreal.ca (François Pinard) writes:
Could it be:
Date+time [2012-01-23]: = [2012-01-23 lun]
when appropriate?
This is now the case.
Thanks for the suggestion.
--
Bastien
Hi, Org people! :-)
Commands `C-c .' and `C-c !' both insert a time stamp in the buffer, and
the date is prompted in the mini-buffer in the same way for both
commands. One of them is going to insert DATE, the other [DATE]. The
mini-buffer always show DATE, like this:
Date+time [2012-01-23]:
pin...@iro.umontreal.ca (François Pinard) writes:
Hi, Org people! :-)
Commands `C-c .' and `C-c !' both insert a time stamp in the buffer, and
the date is prompted in the mini-buffer in the same way for both
commands. One of them is going to insert DATE, the other [DATE]. The
mini-buffer
Hi !
If I understood well, I think that the difference between C-c . and C-c ! is
that the timestamp is active or not.
DATE is an active date that appear in agenda view. So you have ti use it if
you want to see the task scheduled or deadlined.
[DATE] format does not allow the timestamp to
Lolo le 13 lolol...@gmail.com writes:
Hi !
If I understood well, I think that the difference between C-c . and
C-c ! is that the timestamp is active or not.
DATE is an active date that appear in agenda view. So you have ti
use it if you want to see the task scheduled or deadlined.
[DATE]
On 2012-01-24 00:01 +0800, François Pinard wrote:
Commands `C-c .' and `C-c !' both insert a time stamp in the buffer, and
the date is prompted in the mini-buffer in the same way for both
commands. One of them is going to insert DATE, the other [DATE]. The
mini-buffer always show DATE, like