On Wed, Jul 2, 2008 at 4:57 AM, Carsten Dominik wrote:
On Jun 26, 2008, at 8:28 PM, Manish wrote:
On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 8:30 AM, Avdi Grimm wrote:
On Thu, Jun 26, 2008 at 10:55 PM, Manish wrote:
I do not understand this one.
I'm looking for the combination of *all* of those conditions
in one agenda view. In other words, I want to see all the
NEXT items which are either unscheduled or due today; but I
don't want to see any items which are scheduled in the
future.
Carsten,
May I request some more pre-defined conditions when using
org-agenda-skip-* functions e.g. due and not due, optionally
accepting a date+time to compare against (using current date and
time as default)? Hope this makes sense.
-- Manish
Hi Manish, I have not done so yet for the skipping mechanism. But
I have
just implemented time comparisons for property searches. For
example:
+DEADLINE<"<2008-07-01>"
+DEADLINE>="<now>"
+DEADLINE>"<today>"
+SCHEDULED>="<2008-07-01>"+SCHEDULED<="<2008-07-05>"
I guess this should go a long way....
Thank you very much.
I have a question though:
,----[ from org.texi ]
| +If the comparison value is enclosed in double quotes @emph{and}
angular
| +brackets (like @samp{DEADLINE<="<2008-12-24 18:30>"}), both
values are
| +assumed to be date/time specifications in the standard Org
address@hidden
| +only special values that will be recognized are @samp{"<now>"}
for now, and
| address@hidden"<today"} today at 0:00 hours, i.e. without a time
specification.}, and
| +the comparison will be done accordingly.
`----
So when I say DEADLINE<="<today>" and if the deadline has a
timestamp ( < current time ), then it will not be listed. Is my
understanding correct? I wonder if "<today>" should not be
better pegged at 23:59 of today's date?