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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? How Much Vacation Do You Take Every Year? Post 302126667 by MizzGail on Thursday 12th of July 2007 11:07:48 AM
Old 07-12-2007
Computer

I've worked mainly for major coporations and most give you two weeks to start and then you build on that the longer you are employed. When I worked for a bank we had to take two weeks at one time. (some law). They didn't tell me that during the interview and hiring. It really stinks when you only have two weeks and you can't spread it out.

I have been at this job for almost 25 years. We get 10 days to start then 3 weeks (15 business days) after 5 years, 5 personal days and the week between Christmas and New Years off, plus 6 holidays thru the year. We earn another 5 vacation days after 15 years employement and then 1 day for every year after 20years up to 25 yeras for a max of 25 earned vacation days. We can also purchase up to 5 days.

We aren't allowed to sell them.

Since I still have a child at home - although he is high school age - I take the majority of my vacation time in the summer. I reduce my work week to 4 days for the months of July and August then use the rest for family trips.

A few years back they encouraged us to buy additional vacation time - up to 10 days - to reduce overhead so the company could show a better profit. I jumped at the chance.

(There's always the chance they might forget who you are if you don't show up now and then - go figure Smilie)
 

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birthday(1)						      General Commands Manual						       birthday(1)

NAME
birthday - warn about upcoming birthdays and other events SYNOPSIS
birthday [-w|-c] [-f file] [-W defwarn] [-M maxwarn] [-m minwarn] [-l lines] [-p weeks] [-d total] [-i width] DESCRIPTION
The birthday command reads a file, by default ~/.birthdays, which gives a list of events in the near future (see section FILE FORMAT for details). It can then produce either a list of events which are coming up within the next few weeks, or a text-based calendar with a few lines for each day. OPTIONS
-w Display a list of upcoming events. This is the default. -c Display a calendar, designed to be piped to lpr(1). -f file Read the events from file rather than ~/.birthdays. If file is a single hyphen, read the events from the standard input (usually the terminal). List Options -W warn Warn warn days in advance, for entries that have no w flag (see FILE FORMAT). If this switch is not specified, it defaults to 21 days. -M max Warn at most max days in advance. This overrides any flag given in the file. -m min Warn at least min days in advance. This overrides any flag given in the file. Calendar Options -l lines Print lines lines for every day. -p weeks Print weeks weeks on every page of the calendar. If set to 0, the default, disables page breaks. -d days Print the calendar for up to days days in advance. -i width Print the calendar width characters wide. This affects the length of the lines separating each day, and the point at which events will be word-wrapped. FILE FORMAT
Each line beginning with a hash sign, `#', is a comment and will be ignored. Lines beginning with an ampersand, `&', are directives. Cur- rently there is only one such directive, &include file, which reads in a seperate file from your .birthdays file. file should be given with an absolute path, which should not use the tilde notation to specify your home directory. Any other line specifies the name of a person or event, followed by an equals sign and a date (DD/MM, DD/MM/YY or DD/MM/YYYY, where the form DD/MM/YY is assumed to give a date in the 20th century and is now deprecated), and finally some extra options. These options are: bd This line is a birthday (the default). The year, if given, should be when the person was born. A line designated as a birthday will produce output like Erin has a birthday in 3 days' time or Jemima is 3 in 2 weeks' time. ann This line is an anniversary. The year, if given, should be the year in which the thing happened, producing output like Pen exploded 3 years ago tomorrow given a line such as Pen exploded=12/09/93 ann. ev This line is an event of some sort. If a year is given, the text will be displayed in that year only; otherwise, it will be dis- played every year. The remaining time is simply appended to the text; for instance, the input Easter=7/4/1996 ev would give rise to the text Easter in 1 week's time. wn Warn n days in advance of the date, rather than the default of 21 days or the number given with the -W flag. todate The event lasts until date, which should be in the same format as for the date of the event. fordays The event lasts for days days. DATE SPECIFICATION
The file format documented here handles dates in a couple of slightly non-standard ways. Firstly, the dates are given in British format of DD/MM/YYYY, as opposed to the more normal US format MM/DD/YYYY. Secondly, dates with a two-digit year are assumed to be in the 20th century (19xx), rather than taking the standard convention of assuming all two-digit years less than 70 are in the 21st century. This is for reasons of compatibility with older data files, since many people have birthdays before 1970, and the program was written before I came across the Y2K issues. :-( You should probably avoid this format. EXAMPLE
Joe Blow=25/04/1974 FILES
~/.birthdays Your default birthdays file. SEE ALSO
cal(1) BUGS
Both the "features" in the DATE SPECIFICATION section could be construed as bugs, and are mostly present for backwards compatibility. The calendar mode should be a seperate program. The program cannot warn more than one year in advance of anything. AUTHOR
Andy Mortimer <andy.mortimer@zetnet.co.uk> birthday(1)
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