ttp
, a time tracker inspired by utt
.
Frankly it's also a good resume piece, as it's small enough to read easily, small enough that it didn't take too much time to complete to a "proffesional" standard (documentation pending), and complicated enough that it demonstrates a general understanding of complicated issues like time zones, templating, etc. A lot better then most of what I have on github, which tend towards incomplete experements.
It's not complicated, but it is more readable than the average data-science pipeline, and more of a complete product than most of what I get called on to make proffesionally.
ttp is a python time tracker where you tell the time tracker what you've done after you've already done it. Like writing a git commit message.
start tracking time with ttp start
, then when you've finished a task add it
with ttp add updated my resume
. You can edit your log with ttp edit
.
ttp project someproject
changes what project you're logging to.
ttp report
shows a report of your current tasks. Help is wanted for this, as
we need more template options. Uses jinja2 for templating.
pip install pipx --user
pipx install time-tracker-plus
Optionally enable bash's tab-completion by adding this to your ~/.bashrc
file.
eval "$(_TTP_COMPLETE=source ttp)"
You can write new reports using jinja2. Personally I use this to generate invoices for clients, directly from my hours.
This is with the default.md
template.
Of course this is all sample data.
# default
## Monday, January 20th, 2020 to Sunday, January 26th, 2020
* 1.00h worked on time tracker
* 4.00h worked on time tracker2
* 22.00h worked on time tracker3
* 1.88h worked on time tracker overnight
28.88 hours worked total
An example of the log format
2020-01-25 08:47 -04:00 started-tracking ---------------------
2020-01-25 09:47 -04:00 worked on time tracker
2020-01-25 13:47 -04:00 worked on time tracker 2
2020-01-25 23:47 -04:00 worked on time tracker 3
2020-01-26 01:14 -04:00 worked on time tracker overnight