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Full Discussion: Past Time
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Past Time Post 54076 by Derrek on Sunday 1st of August 2004 06:26:18 PM
Old 08-01-2004
I'm to the point where computing pretty much /is/ my only hobby. I used to be into football, but now pretty much all of my time is spent on the screen. To be more specific, I'm learning C, talking on aim/irc, listening to winamp, and experimenting with different Linux distros on a typical day.
 

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GTIMER(1)							      GTimer								 GTIMER(1)

NAME
gtimer - an application for recording time spent on user-defined tasks. SYNOPSIS
gtimer [-midnight offset] [-weekstart day] [-nosplash] [-resume] [-start task] DESCRIPTION
GTimer allows the user to time one or more activities. Users define tasks that can be timed. Text annotations can also be added to tasks. Reports can be generated that summarize time spent and annotations. OPTIONS
-midnight offset Specify the offset of midnight to use. Users can allow time spent after midnight to be recorded for the previous day. For exam- ple, the command gtimer -midnight 400 will not consider everything 3:59AM the previous day. -weekstart day Specify which day of the week should be considered the beginning of the week when generating reports. day should be a number between 0 and 6, where 0 is Sunday. For example, the command gtimer -weekstart 1 will use Monday as the first day of the week for all weekly reports. The default is 0 (Sunday). -resume Start timing any tasks that were still be timed when GTimer last exited. -start taskname Start timing the specified task immediately. This option can be used more than once on the command line. For example, you can start a tasks with: gtimer -start 'GTimer development' -nosplash Do not display the splash window on startup. FILES
~/.gtimer/ data storage SEE ALSO
enscript(1), lpr(1) AUTHOR
Craig Knudsen <cknudsen@cknudsen.com> <http://www.cknudsen.com/> GTimer WWW home page: <http://www.cknudsen.com/gtimer/> GTimer Mar 19, 2003 GTIMER(1)
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