ti
is a small command line time tracking application. Simple basic usage
looks like this
$ ti on my-project
$ ti fin
You can also give it human-readable times.
$ ti on my-project 30mins ago
ti
sports many other cool features. Read along to discover.
ti
is a simple command line time tracker. It has been completely re-written in
python (from being a bash script) and has (almost) complete test coverage. It is
inspired by timed, which is a nice project
and you should check out if you don't like ti
. It also takes inspiration from
the simplicity of t.
If a time tracker tool makes me think for more than 3-5 seconds, I lose my line
of thought and forget what I was doing. This is why I created ti
. With ti
,
you'll be as fast as you can type, which you should be good with anyway.
The most important part about ti
is that it
provides just a few commands to manage your time tracking and gets out
of your way. All data is saved in a JSON file (~/.ti-sheet
, can be changed by
setting $SHEET_FILE
) for easy access to whatever you need to do. Some ideas,
- Read your json file to generate beautiful html reports.
- Build monthly statistics based on tags or the tasks themselves.
- Read the currently working project and make it show up in your terminal prompt. May be even with how long you've been on it. (!!!)
Its your data.
Oh and by the way, the source is a fairly small python script, so if you know python, you may want to skim over it to get a better feel of how it works.
Note: If you have used the previous bash version of ti
, which was horribly
tied up to only work on linux, you might notice the lack of plugins in this
python version. I am not really missing them, so I might not add them. If anyone
has any interesting use cases for it, I'm willing to consider.
Here's the minimal usage style:
$ ti on my-project
Start working on my-project.
$ ti status
You have been working on my-project for less than a minute.
$ ti fin
So you stopped working on my-project.
on
and fin
can take a time (format described further down) at which to apply
the action.
$ ti on another-project 2 hours ago
Start working on another-project.
$ ti s
You have been working on another-project for about 2 hours.
$ ti fin 30 minutes ago
So you stopped working on another-project.
Also illustrating in the previous example is short aliases of all commands,
their first letter. Like, s
for status
, o
for on
, f
for fin
, etc.
Put brief notes on what you've been doing.
$ ti note waiting for Napoleon to take over the world
$ ti n another simple note for demo purposes
Tag your activities for fun and profit.
$ ti tag imp
Get a log of all activities with the log
(or l
) command.
$ ti log
Run ti -h
(or --help
or help
or just h
) to get a short command summary
of commands.
- Short:
o
- Syntax:
ti (o|on) <name> [<time>...]
Start tracking time for the project/activity given by <name>
. For example,
ti on conquest
tells ti
to start tracking for the activitiy conquest
now. You can
optionally specify a relative time in the past like so,
ti on conquest 10mins ago
The format of the time is detailed further below.
- Short:
f
- Syntax:
ti (f|fin) [<time>...]
End tracking for the current activity now. Just like with on
command above,
you can give an optional time to the past. Example
ti fin 10mins ago
tells ti
that you finished working on the current activity at, well, 10
minutes ago.
- Short:
s
- Syntax:
ti (s|status)
Gives short human readable message on the current status. i.e., whether anything is being tracked currently or not. Example,
$ ti on conqering-the-world
Start working on conqering-the-world.
$ ti status
You have been working on `conqering-the-world` for less than a minute.
- Short:
t
- Syntax:
ti (t|tag) <tag>...
This command adds the given tags to the current activity. Tags are not currently
used within the ti
time tracker, but they will be saved in the json data file.
You may use them for whatever purposes you like.
For example, if you have a script to generate a html report from your ti
data,
you could tag some activities with a tag like red
or important
so that, that
activity will appear in red in the final html report.
Use it like,
ti tag red for-joe
adds the tags red
and for-joe
to the current activitiy. You can specify any
number of tags.
Tags are currently for your purpose. Use them as you see fit.
- Short:
n
- Syntax:
ti (n|note) <note-text>...
This command adds a note on the current activity. Again, like tags, this has no
significance with the time tracking aspect of ti
. This is for your own
recording purposes and for the scripts your write to process your ti
data.
Use it like,
ti note Discuss this with the other team.
adds the note Discuss this with the other team.
to the current activity.
- Short:
l
- Syntax:
ti (l|log) [today]
Gives a table like representation of all activities and total time spent on each of them.
Currently only the following are recognized. If there is something that is not
handled, but should be, please open an issue about it or a pull request
(function in question is parse_time
)
-
n seconds ago can be written as:
- nseconds ago
- nsecond ago
- nsecs ago
- nsec ago
- ns ago
a
in place of n in all above cases, to mean 1 second.- Eg.,
10s ago
,a sec ago
25 seconds ago
,25seconds ago
.
-
n minutes ago can be written as:
- nminutes ago
- nminute ago
- nmins ago
- nmin ago
a
in place of n in all above cases, to mean 1 minute.- Eg.,
5mins ago
,a minute ago
,10 minutes ago
.
-
n hours ago can be written as:
- nhours ago
- nhour ago
- nhrs ago
- nhr ago
a
oran
in place of n in all above cases, to mean 1 hour.- Eg.,
an hour ago
,an hr ago
,2hrs ago
.
Where n is an arbitrary number and any number of spaces between n and the time unit are allowed.
The project is beta. If you find any bug or have any feedback, please do open an issue on Github issues.
You can download ti
from the source on
github.
- Put it somewhere in your
$PATH
and make sure it has executable permissions. - Install pyyaml using the command
pip install --user pyyaml
. - Install colorama using the command
pip install --user colorama
.
After that, ti
should be working fine.
Also, visit the project page on github for any further details.
Created and fed by Shrikant Sharat (@sharat87). To get in touch, ping me on twitter or email.