Translate
Appearance
Text
This page always uses small font size
Width
This tool does not work without JavaScript. JavaScript is disabled, failed to work, or this browser is unsupported.
Translations:KTimeTracker/Page display title/bdr
KTimeTracker
You need translation rights to translate messages.Get permission
Loading...
Latest updatesAll changes
Suggestions
In other languages
Need more help?Ask for more information
Translations:KTimeTracker/1/bdr
'''KTimeTracker is a todo management and time tracking application.
You need translation rights to translate messages.Get permission
Loading...
Latest updatesAll changes
Suggestions
In other languages
Need more help?Ask for more information
;Challenge: You are a software consultant with several customers and many project assignments. When billing your customers, you are required to report how much time you spend on what task.
;Solution: Use '''KTimeTracker''' to hold a list of projects and tasks. Whenever you switch your activity, double-click on the respective task and see how its time gets tracked. At the end of the day (or month) you can obtain a journal how much time you spent on what task.
* by means of your Linux distribution, or
* by compiling from source code ([https://download.kde.org/stable/ktimetracker/ stable releases], [https://commits.kde.org/ktimetracker Git repository]), or
* with pre-built installers/packages for Windows and macOS for [https://download.kde.org/stable/ktimetracker/5.0.1/ stable releases] and [https://binary-factory.kde.org/ nightly snapshots].
* Organize tasks into subtasks:
**'''KTimeTracker''' allows you to organize your work like a todo-list. You can group your work by tasks and subtask. Every subtask can still have a subtask below it, up to some 1000 levels.
* Track your time:
**Whenever you start working on a new task, just double-click the corresponding task in your todo-list. You will see a clock appearing next to this task indicating its time is now recorded.
* Edit task history and comments:
**'''KTimeTracker''' allows you to edit your task's history and to put a comment for every work-event:
* Pause detection:
**When going for lunch, it may happen that you forget to stop timetracking before. No problem: the idle time detector in '''KTimeTracker''' will pop up after a configurable amount of time giving you the possibility to revert (as if you said, "I was '''not''' working during this time.") or continue timing (as if you said "I was working during this time.").
''Configuration for PDA'': Removes the search-bar to gain screen real estate. Assumes a touch-screen and pops up a context menu on every mouse click, even with the left button.
There have been 3 file format changes in the over 10-year-history of KTimeTracker:
{| class="wikitable sortable" border=1
! KDE SC version !! KTimeTracker file
|-
| -3.1 || flat files
|-
| 3.2-3.5 || iCal files with X-KDE-karm fields, import possibility for flat files
|-
| 4.x, 5.0 || iCal files with X-KDE-KTimeTracker fields, automated import for iCal files with X-KDE-karm fields
|-
|}
Because of the iCal file format, KTimeTracker is compatible with korganizer. You can even work synchroneously on one file with korganizer and KTimeTracker. If one program changes the file, the updates will be propagated to the other application automatically.
'''KTimeTracker''' scales well and it regularly tested with a 1.2 MB file ([https://bugs.kde.org/attachment.cgi?id=14413&action=view download it]) available from ([https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=110523 KDE Bug report 110523]). A '''KTimeTracker''' benchmark is available [https://cgit.kde.org/ktimetracker.git/tree/test here].
As you explore '''KTimeTracker''' you'll find questions that need answering.
*Chat with us, the KDE users, on [irc://chat.freenode.net#kde IRC, the KDE users' channel].
*Forum under Kontact & PIM https://forum.kde.org/viewforum.php?f=215
Video demos are here:
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LdlEkJAMj_A The "track active applications" demo]
Loading messages...
0% translated, 0% reviewed
Retrieved from "https://userbase.kde.org/Special:Translate"