KTimeTracker: Difference between revisions

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    {{Template:I18n/Language Navigation Bar|KTimeTracker}}
    <languages />
    {{Infobox_Software
    | title                  = Ktimetracker
    }}


    = What is KTimeTracker =
    {|class="tablecenter vertical-centered"
    |[[Image:ktimetracker.png|thumb|300px|KTimeTracker]]||<translate> <!--T:1-->
    '''KTimeTracker is a todo management and time tracking application.</translate>'''
    |}


    KTimeTracker tracks time spent on various tasks. It is useful for tracking billable hours and can report the hours logged by task and day.
    <translate>
    This time history can be exported to a comma-delimited text file for import into other billing and/or project management tools.
    KTimeTracker detects when your keyboard and mouse are idle and can associate different tasks with different desktops, two tools that can help keep the timer running on the correct task.


    [[Image:ktimetracker.png|500px|center]]
    == Overview == <!--T:3-->


    = Using KTimeTracker =
    <!--T:4-->
    '''KTimeTracker''' tracks time spent on various tasks.


    == What KTimeTracker can do for you ==
    <!--T:5-->
    The current stable version of KTimeTracker (4.1) can:
    ;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.
    * organize and stopwatch tasks, subtasks
    KTimeTracker allows you to organize and stopwatch your work. You can put your daily todo-list into that tool. You can group your work by tasks, subtask and n-th level tasks, meaning that every subtask can still have a subtask below it, up to some 1000 levels.


    * edit task history and comments
    <!--T:6-->
    KTimeTracker allows you to edit your task's history and to put a comment for every event that you have stopped:
    ;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.


    [[Image:ktimetracker-history.png|500px|center]]
    == Get it == <!--T:34-->


    === Options ===
    <!--T:35-->
    KTimeTracker 4 has the following behavior options:
    You can install KTimeTracker either


    [[Image:Snapshot-ktimetracker-options.png|center]]
    <!--T:36-->
    * 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].


    == Compatibility ==
    == Features == <!--T:7-->
    Up to KDE 3.1 (incl.), flat files were used to store the data. From KDE 3.2 on, the iCal format is used, but flat files can still be imported until KDE 4. With KDE 4, the custom fields
    X-KDE-karm-duration, X-KDE-karm-totalTaskTime, X-KDE-karm-totalSessionTime and X-KDE-karm-desktopList were renamed to X-KDE-KTimeTracker-duration and the respective other names. KTimeTracker 4 can still read karm iCal files, but not the other way round.


    == Does it scale ==
    <!--T:8-->
    KTimeTracker scales well and it regularly tested with a 1.2 MB file (https://bugs.kde.org/attachment.cgi?id=14413&action=view) available from (https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=110523). A ktimetracker benchmark is available from [http://websvn.kde.org:80/trunk/KDE/kdepim/ktimetracker/test/ktimetrackerbenchmark?view=markup here].
    The current stable version of '''KTimeTracker''' (5.0.1) can:


    == Support ==
    <!--T:9-->
    * needing support ? Ask and answer in the chat at irc.kde.org, channel #kde
    * 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.


    = Developing KTimeTracker =
    <!--T:10-->
    * look at [http://bugs.kde.org/buglist.cgi?short_desc_type=allwordssubstr&short_desc=&long_desc_type=allwordssubstr&long_desc=&product=KTimeTracker&component=general&component=reporting&bug_status=UNCONFIRMED&bug_status=NEW&bug_status=ASSIGNED&bug_status=REOPENED&bugidtype=include&bug_id=&votes=&emailassigned_to1=1&emailtype1=substring&email1=&emailassigned_to2=1&emailreporter2=1&emailcc2=1&emailtype2=substring&email2=&changedin=&chfieldfrom=&chfieldto=Now&chfieldvalue=&order=Reuse+same+sort+as+last+time&cmdtype=doit&newqueryname=&namedcmd=allKTimeTrackerbugs our Bugzilla]
    * Track your time:
    * join our discussion on irc.kde.org, channel #kontact
    **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.
    * learn programming with KDE's [http://techbase.kde.org/Development/Tutorials Programming Tutorial]


    == So you want to become a KTimeTracker developer ==
    <!--T:11-->
    Here are your classes:
    * Edit task history and comments:
    * mainwindow.*: Is the main window of the KDE application
    **'''KTimeTracker''' allows you to edit your task's history and to put a comment for every work-event:
    * karm_part.*: Is the KPart of KTimeTracker
    ** timetrackerwidget.*: Is a widget with no or several tabs that contain
    *** taskview.*: Is a treeListWidget that contains:
    **** task.*: A QObject and QTreeWidgetItem. A task can be constructed from a taskview and a todo. As soon as you instanciate a task, it becomes visible in your TreeWidget.
    **** karmstorage.*: Is the storage backend that contains a:
    ***** KCal::ResourceCalendar


    == Nokia N810 ==
    <!--T:12-->
    I got a Nokia N810 from Nokia to allow me porting KTimeTracker to it. I appreciate this a lot and am now kompiling KTimeTracker for arm. The project is not ready, here is what I found out:
    [[Image:ktimetracker-history.png|500px|center]]
     
    To kompile KTimeTracker for the Nokia N810
    * add the maemo repository
    * install openssh
     
    == dbus ==
    dbus is clearly a developer topic. To test the dbus functionality of your KTimeTracker, have KTimeTracker running and proceed like in this example:
    qdbus
    ...
      org.kde.KTimeTracker
    ...
    qdbus org.kde.KTimeTracker
    ...
    /KTimeTracker
    ...
    qdbus org.kde.KTimeTracker /KTimeTracker
    ...
    method void org.kde.KTimeTracker.KTimeTracker.quit()
    ...
    qdbus org.kde.KTimeTracker /KTimeTracker org.kde.KTimeTracker.KTimeTracker.quit
     
    == Internationalization ==
    You want to test the translation of KTimeTracker. For this, you want to call KTimeTracker in, say, german. For this, you need to know how you at all can call a KDE 4 program in another language than english. Here is as an example how I call akregator in german:
    wget http://websvn.kde.org/*checkout*/trunk/l10n-kde4/de/messages/kdepim /akregator.po 
    msgfmt -o akregator.mo akregator.po
    cp akregator.mo .kde4/share/locale/de/LC_MESSAGES/
    KDE4_LANG=de akregator
    The respective KTimeTracker translation is still stored in karm.*o, and it works.
     
    == How to reproduce a stale lock ==
    Here is an example to give you an idea:
    touch .kde/share/apps/kabc/lock/_home_tom_.kde_share_apps_karm_karm.ics.lock
     
    == How to get rid of debugging output ==
    cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
     
    == Goals ==
    * Unicode - I found out it is already capable of UTF-8.
     
    == Where is what ? ==
    * The latest development sourcecode is available via web at http://websvn.kde.org/trunk/KDE/kdepim/ktimetracker
    * You can subscribe to watch code changes at
    http://commitfilter.kde.org
    * You can get informed on irc about code changes at freenode,
    #kde-commits
    * You can discuss about KDE pim development on freenode,
    #kontact
    * The api documentation is available at http://developer.kde.org/documentation/library/cvs-api/kdepim-apidocs/karm/html/index.html
    * The userdocumentation is generated from
    http://websvn.kde.org/trunk/KDE/kdepim/doc/ktimetracker
    * KTimeTracker all-you-need in the internet:
    http://userbase.kde.org/KTimeTracker
    * KTimeTracker as part of pim, for developers:
    http://pim.kde.org/components/karm.php / http://websvn.kde.org/trunk/www/areas/pim/components/karm.php
    * KTimeTracker as part of pim, for users:
    http://kontact.kde.org / http://websvn.kde.org/trunk/www/apps/kontact
     
    == Development Direction ==
    The following similar programs can give you inspiration how to move forward developing:
    * hourglass
    * gnotime
    * titrax
    * taskCoach
    * Hamster
     
    == Kontact plugin vs. Standalone ==
    The Kontact plugin is realized via a KPart. The elegant solution would be to have one KPart that can be integrated into Kontact and one shell that just displays the KPart. This is not so far now. At the moment, karm_part.cpp implements the KTimeTracker part and mainwindow.cpp implements the standalone application.
    Here's a patch that allows us to use the karm part (karm_part.cpp) as widget of mainwindow, not perfect yet, but showing a direction:
    <pre>
    Index: mainwindow.cpp
    ===================================================================
    --- mainwindow.cpp      (revision 618712)
    +++ mainwindow.cpp      (working copy)
    @@ -24,6 +24,7 @@
    #include <qstring.h>
     
    #include "karmerrors.h"
    +#include "karm_part.h"
    #include "karmutility.h"
    #include "mainwindow.h"
    #include "preferences.h"
    @@ -43,9 +44,10 @@
        _sessionSum( 0 )
    {
     
    +  _karmpart  = new karmPart(this,"hi",this,"hi");
      _taskView  = new TaskView( this, 0, icsfile );
     
    -  setCentralWidget( _taskView );
    +  setCentralWidget( _karmpart->widget() );
      // status bar
      startStatusBar();


    @@ -85,7 +87,7 @@
    <!--T:13-->
      connect( _taskView, SIGNAL( tasksChanged( QPtrList<Task> ) ),
    * Pause detection:
                          _tray, SLOT( updateToolTip( QPtrList<Task> ) ));
    **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.").


    - _taskView->load();
    == Options == <!--T:14-->
    +  //_taskView->load();


      // Everything that uses Preferences has been created now, we can let it
    <!--T:15-->
      // emit its signals
    '''KTimeTracker 5''' has not more and not less than the following options:
    Index: mainwindow.h
    ===================================================================
    --- mainwindow.h        (revision 618621)
    +++ mainwindow.h        (working copy)
    @@ -5,6 +5,7 @@


    #include "karmerrors.h"
    <!--T:16-->
    #include <karmdcopiface.h>
    [[Image:Snapshot-ktimetracker-options-behavior.png|center]]
    +#include "karm_part.h"
    #include "reportcriteria.h"


    class KAccel;
    <!--T:17-->
    @@ -34,7 +35,8 @@
    [[Image:Snapshot-ktimetracker-options-appearance.png|center]]


        KAccel*          _accel;
    <!--T:18-->
        KAccelMenuWatch* _watcher;
    ''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.
    -   TaskView*        _taskView;
    +    TaskView*      _taskView;
    +    karmPart*        _karmpart;
        long            _totalSum;
        long            _sessionSum;
        Preferences*    _preferences;
    Index: Makefile.am
    ===================================================================
    --- Makefile.am (revision 618621)
    +++ Makefile.am (working copy)
    @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@
    libkarm_shared_la_LIBADD = $(top_builddir)/libkcal/libkcal.la \
                $(top_builddir)/kresources/remote/libkcal_resourceremote.la \
                  $(top_builddir)/libkdepim/libkdepim.la $(LIBXSS) -lkdeprint
    -karm_SOURCES = main.cpp
    +karm_SOURCES = main.cpp karm_part.cpp
    karm_LDADD = libkarm_shared.la
    karm_LDFLAGS = $(all_libraries) $(KDE_RPATH)
    noinst_HEADERS = desktoptracker.h edittaskdialog.h printdialog.h \
    </pre>


    == IdleTimeDetector ==
    <!--T:19-->
    The idletimedetector is in the equally-named .cpp and .h file. It starts a qtimer and at every timeout, checks, if the X extension delivers for the last user interaction a timepoint that is further away than the maxIdleTime.
    [[Image:Snapshot-ktimetracker-options-storage.png|center]]


    == About storage ==
    The storage of your KTimeTracker data takes place in an iCal file. That format needs a bit of explanation. A simple one looks like the following:


    <pre>
    == Compatibility == <!--T:20-->
    BEGIN:VCALENDAR
    PRODID:-//K Desktop Environment//NONSGML libkcal 3.5//EN
    VERSION:2.0
    BEGIN:VTODO
    DTSTAMP:20060915T181010Z
    ORGANIZER;CN=root:MAILTO:
    X-KDE-karm-totalSessionTime:0
    X-KDE-karm-totalTaskTime:19
    CREATED:20060609T230212Z
    UID:libkcal-652058592.803
    SEQUENCE:0
    LAST-MODIFIED:20060915T181010Z
    SUMMARY:fg
    CLASS:PUBLIC
    PRIORITY:5
    PERCENT-COMPLETE:0
    END:VTODO


    BEGIN:VEVENT
    <!--T:21-->
    DTSTAMP:20060915T181010Z
    There have been 3 file format changes in the over 10-year-history of KTimeTracker:
    ORGANIZER:MAILTO:
    {| class="wikitable sortable" border=1
    X-KDE-karm-duration:300
    ! KDE SC version !! KTimeTracker file
    CREATED:20060915T174305Z
    |-
    UID:libkcal-6397995.845
    | -3.1        || flat files
    SEQUENCE:0
    |-
    LAST-MODIFIED:20060910T174305Z
    | 3.2-3.5    || iCal files with X-KDE-karm fields, import possibility for flat files
    SUMMARY:fg
    |-
    CLASS:PUBLIC
    | 4.x, 5.0  || iCal files with X-KDE-KTimeTracker fields, automated import for iCal files with X-KDE-karm fields
    PRIORITY:5
    |-
    CATEGORIES:KArm
    |}
    RELATED-TO:libkcal-652058592.803
    DTSTART:20060910T172346Z
    DTEND:20060910T174305Z
    TRANSP:OPAQUE
    END:VEVENT


    END:VCALENDAR
    <!--T:22-->
    </pre>
    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.


    === A test case for kcal ===
    == Does it scale? == <!--T:25-->
    '''CMakeLists.txt'''
    <pre>
    PROJECT( kde4start )
    FIND_PACKAGE(KDE4 REQUIRED)
    INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES( ${KDE4_INCLUDES} . )


    <!--T:26-->
    '''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].


    SET(kde4startSources main.cpp )
    == Support == <!--T:27-->


    KDE4_ADD_EXECUTABLE(kde4start ${kde4startSources} )
    <!--T:28-->
    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


    TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(kde4start ${KDE4_KDEUI_LIBS} ${KDE4_KCAL_LIBS} ${KDE4_KPARTS_LIBS} kdepim kcal_resourceremote )
    == Videos == <!--T:29-->
    </pre>
    '''main.cpp'''
    <pre>
    #include <QString>
    #include <kapplication.h>
    #include <kaboutdata.h>
    #include <kmessagebox.h>
    #include <kcmdlineargs.h>
    #include <KMainWindow>
    #include <kcal/resourcecalendar.h>
    #include <kcal/resourcecached.h>
    #include <kcal/resourcelocal.h>


    int main (int argc, char *argv[])
    <!--T:30-->
    {
    Video demos are here:
      const QByteArray& ba=QByteArray("test");
    * [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LdlEkJAMj_A The "track active applications" demo]
      const KLocalizedString name=ki18n("myName");
      KAboutData aboutData( ba, ba, name, ba, name);
      KCmdLineArgs::init( argc, argv, &aboutData );
      KApplication khello;
      KCal::ResourceCalendar* cal;
      KCal::ResourceCached* resource;
      resource=new KCal::ResourceLocal("/tmp/KTimeTrackerkonsole.ics");
      cal=resource;
    }
    </pre>
    '''kompile, link and run'''
    cmake . && make && ./kde4start


    = Related Projects =
    == See also == <!--T:31-->


    http://websvn.kde.org/trunk/playground/base/plasma/applets/timetracker/
    <!--T:32-->
    * [https://community.kde.org/KTimeTracker Become a KTimeTracker developer]


    = Readings =
    <!--T:33-->
    * http://doc.trolltech.com/4.1/itemviews-simpletreemodel.html
    [[Category:Office]]
    * RFC 2445
    </translate>

    Latest revision as of 16:04, 7 March 2021

    KTimeTracker
    KTimeTracker is a todo management and time tracking application.


    Overview

    KTimeTracker tracks time spent on various tasks.

    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.

    Get it

    You can install KTimeTracker either

    Features

    The current stable version of KTimeTracker (5.0.1) can:

    • 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.").

    Options

    KTimeTracker 5 has not more and not less than the following options:

    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.


    Compatibility

    There have been 3 file format changes in the over 10-year-history of KTimeTracker:

    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.

    Does it scale?

    KTimeTracker scales well and it regularly tested with a 1.2 MB file (download it) available from (KDE Bug report 110523). A KTimeTracker benchmark is available here.

    Support

    As you explore KTimeTracker you'll find questions that need answering.

    Videos

    Video demos are here:

    See also