Skip to content

Keep track of your working hours the UNIX way - using plain text files

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

haansn08/arbeitszeit.py

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

8 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

arbeitszeit.py

Keep track of your working hours the UNIX way - using plain text files. Date and time period format is ISO8601.

Requirements

The dateutil module: pacman -S python-dateutil.

Invocation

./arbeitszeit.py [inputfile1 inputfile2...]

If no input files are given, stdin is read.

Example

# /tmp/example
# Define working schedule
for 2019 #if no year is given assume 2019
#employment started on 2019-01-14
#4 hours on workdays (MO-FR)
schedule PT4H valid=--01-14/--03-31
#on April 1st working hours were reduced to 3 hours from MO to TH
schedule PT3H valid=--04-01/2021-01-31 byweekday=MO,TU,WE,TH

for 2019-01
work 14T09:00/12:15 #on 2019-01-14 we worked from 09:00 to 12:15
work 14T13:15/13:55 #and from 13:15 to 13:55
work 15T09:00/11:50
work 16T09:00/11:50
work 17T10:20/11:45
work 21T11:25/11:45
work 22T09:00/09:30
work 22T10:00/11:50
work 23T11:30/11:55
#let's take a 30 minute lunch break
work 24T12:30/14:00 lunch=PT30M
work 28T09:10/09:25
work 29T10:00/10:50
work 30T10:00/11:45
work 30T14:50/15:45
work 31T09:50/13:55

Calling arbeitszeit.py on this input file will output one line for each day of our employment keeping track of how much work was scheduled for this day (SOLL), how much work was actually done (IST) and the running total of the difference (AKT).

$ ./arbeitszeit.py /tmp/example | grep 2019-01
2019-01-14: SOLL 04:00 IST 03:55 AKT -00:05
2019-01-15: SOLL 04:00 IST 02:50 AKT -01:15
2019-01-16: SOLL 04:00 IST 02:50 AKT -02:25
2019-01-17: SOLL 04:00 IST 01:25 AKT -05:00
2019-01-18: SOLL 04:00 IST 00:00 AKT -09:00
2019-01-19: SOLL 00:00 IST 00:00 AKT -09:00
2019-01-20: SOLL 00:00 IST 00:00 AKT -09:00
2019-01-21: SOLL 04:00 IST 00:20 AKT -12:40

Seems like we are not hitting our target hours. Ouch.

Input syntax reference

for <date>

For all following commands: If a date string without year, month, ... is encountered, fill in the omitted values from date.

schedule <period> valid=<interval> [byweekday=MO,TU,WE,TH,FR]

Use to specify your working hours. Work for period amount of time on weekdays given by byweekday (Default: Monday to Friday). You must specify the start and end date of this schedule. arbeitszeit.py will output one line per day starting from the earliest start day of all validity intervals and ending with the latest end date. At least one schedule line must be present.

holiday <date|byeaster=n>

Use to specify yearly public holidays. No working hours will be scheduled for holidays. If the date is dependent on Easter use byeaster=n with n being the offset from Easter Sunday in days. The national holidays of Austria can be found in the file holidays-at. Remember to include this file in your input files or paste into your input file. Pull requests for other countries are welcome.

  • holiday --05-01 #Staatsfeiertag
  • holiday byeaster=50 #Monday after Pentecost

vacation <interval> or sick <interval>

When you take off work. No working hours will be scheduled for the days in interval.

  • vacation 08-08/08-14
  • vacation 2020-06-16/2020-07-09

work <interval> [lunch=period]

Records working hours. The time period given in lunch will be subtracted. Use with for to avoid repeating the year and month in each line. Note: If the end time is not on the same date as the start time (you work around midnight) you must include the new date.

  • work 22T06:10/11:35
  • work 09T21:00/10T00:30
  • work 2019-01-24T07:30/17:00 lunch=PT1H30M

About

Keep track of your working hours the UNIX way - using plain text files

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages