| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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And fix item start day for prev command
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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DAY(t) is midnight (the day) of time_t t.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The p(rev) command finds the previous occurrence of a recurrent item, analogous
to the n(ext) command.
A bug in the next command is corrected..
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Support has been implemented for recurrence rule parts BYMONTH, BYMONTHDAY and
BYDAY. A new test has been added.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Conversion of COUNT to UNTIL was a simple calculation which assumed one
repetiton per period (day, week, month or year); it does not take exception
days and invalid dates into account. Solved by a new function which returns the
n'th occurrence of a recurrence rule.
In calcurse UNTIL is interpreted as a day (DATE), in RFC 5545 as a time of day
(DATE-TIME). This has implications when a recurrence rule has an occurrence on
the UNTIL day, see comment in ical.c
An "Import:" note is added when a multi-day event is imported and turned into a
calcurse all-day event.
Icalendar quotes in comments have been updated to RFC 5545.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Better name: day for occur.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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When the order of a weekday in BYDAY rule expansion (like -5SA or 5SU
for monthly or 55WE for yearly) exceeds the number of available weekdays
in the period (month or year), rule expansion with negative order could
result in a floating point exception. The reason: the modified frequency
might become zero.
Solution. Check order against number of available weekdays and terminate
expansion early whenever possible (also for positive orders).
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The generic command 'next' is introduced.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Code duplication has been eliminated by calling update_rept() from the
repeat command ui_day_item_repeat().
The repeat command asks for simple or advanced repetition.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The function update_rept() is extended with editing of the three
recurrence rule lists for BYMONTH, BYMONTHDAY and BYDAY.
The integers of the bymonth and bymonthday lists are edited directly as
integers, while those of the bywday list are mapped to localized weekday
names (as they appear in the calendar panel) with an optional integer
prefix (in RFC5545 style: 1MO, -2SA).
The RFC5545 (icalendar) requirement that the start day must be the first
occurrence and must match the recurrence rule, is met by testing that an
occurrence indeed appears on the start day, in these circumstances:
- when a recurrent item is loaded from file
- when the recurrence rule of an item is edited interactively
- when a recurrent appointment gets a new start time
- when a recurrent appointment is moved
Copy and paste of a recurrent item will only retain the basic recurrence
properties of type, frequency, until and exception days.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Terms and concepts are from RFC 5545 (the iCalendar specification).
Overall design
--------------
Calcurse is extended with full support for BYMONTH, BYDAY and BYMONTHDAY
recurrence rule (rrule) parts. The three rule parts are lists of,
respectively, months, weekdays and monthdays. The lists are added to
'struct rpt' as linked lists of integers, and the data file format is
extended accordingly (details below). Load and save of the lists follow
the pattern of the existing list of exception dates, also in 'struct
rpt'.
The function recur_item_find_occurence() is split into a front-end and a
back-end. The back-end, called find_occurrence(), is the original
function extended with rrule reductions; the front-end retains the
original name and performs rrule expansions. Front-end plus back-end are
backwards compatible and require no changes in calling functions.
There is no user interface in this patch.
Data file extensions
--------------------
The BYMONTH, BYDAY and BYMONTHDAY lists are added to that part of an
item line which describes the recurrence rule (the "{...}" part). Each
list is - like the list of exception days - a space-separated string of
values identified by the initial character. Each list is optional and,
if present, must follow the until date and precede the exception day
list. The lists must appear in order BYMONTHDAY list, BYDAY list and
BYMONTH list.
The possible list values are
- BYMONTH: m1, m2, ..., m12
- BYDAY: w0, w1, ..., w6, w7, w-7, w8, w-8, ..., w377, w-377
- BYMONTHDAY: d1, d2, ..., d31, d-1, d-2, ..., d-31
which are interpreted as (cf. RFC 5545)
- BYMONTH: January, February, ..., December.
- BYDAY: SU, MO, ..., SA, +1SU, -1SU, +1MO, -1MO, ..., +53SA, -53SA
- BYMONTHDAY: the first, the second, ..., the 31st, the last,
the last but one, ..., the last but 30 day of the month
Examples:
Thursday, TH, is w4; Saturday, SA, is w6.
The seventh Thursday, +7TH, is w53 (7 * 7 + 4 = 53); the last but second
Saturday, -2SA, is w-20 (2 * 7 + 6 = 20); the last day of the month is
d-1.
Note that the values w-1, w-2, ..., w-6 are not used.
A recurrent appointment with a BYDAY rule part:
06/23/2019 @ 12:00 -> 06/23/2019 @ 13:00 {1W w0 w6} |every week on Sunday and Saturday
An event with a BYDAY and a BYMONTH rule part:
10/27/2019 [1] {1Y w-7 m10} every year on last Sunday in October
An event with until date, a BYMONTH rule part and an exception day:
06/23/2019 [1] {1Y -> 08/31/2021 m5 m6 m7 !07/23/2020} every year on the 23rd in May, June and July for three years, starting on Sunday, 23 June 2019, but not on 23 July 2020.
Recurrence set expansion and reduction
---------------------------------------
In calcurse a recurrence rule is a quadruple (s, d, r, e) consisting of
start, duration, repetition pattern and exception days and is
implemented as:
(time_t start, long dur, struct rpt *rpt, llist_t *exc)
In RFC 5545 parlance, a recurrence rule defines a recurrence set
consisting of all recurrence instances (occurrences) not earlier than
start which match the rule pattern. With this concept in mind,
recur_item_find_occurremce() may be thought of as a membership function
for a recurrence set. The call
recur_item_find_occurrence(s, d, r, e, day, occurrence)
returns true if day belongs to the recurrence set of (s, d, r, e); if so
occurrence points to the recurrence instance (the set member).
For a recurrence rule with only the basic DAYLY, WEEKLY, MONTHLY or
YEARLY type and frequency the recurrence set consists of periodically
repeated instances. The BYxxx rule parts modify the recurrence set by
reducing or expanding it as specified by RFC 5545.
Expansion is implemented in the front-end by modifications of start
and/or frequency of the rule (s, d, r, e), often several times, in such
a way that the desired recurrence instances are included in the
recurrence set. This is possible because the front-end as the very first
thing checks for early days (day < s). When day is known not to be
early, start (s) can safely be moved backwards. Likewise, if frequency
must be changed, the front-end checks whether the frequency repetition
applies to the week, month or year of day.
Reduction is easier and is performed in the back-end along with the
existing validity checks. It consists in checking whether month, day of
month or weekday of a found occurrence is on the appropriate list.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The patch contains no functional changes, but is a necessary
precondition for extensions of update_rept() (in ui-day.c) with further
recurrence rules.
The reason is that recurrence parameters must be treated as a whole: if
an edit session is cancelled at any point, no value should change, and
all parameters should remain as they were. Hence, the new values must
only be set after all of them have been determined. This was not the
case for the list of exception days, but as long as it was treated last,
it did not matter.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The last part of loading appointments and events is performed by four
"scan" functions called from io_load_app(). Failure in this part of data
load does not use io_load_error().
The four "scan" functions are changed to return an error message on
failure and NULL otherwise (the previous return value was not used).
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The recurrence parameters are type, frequency, until date and exception
list (in RFC 5545 parlance FREQ, INTERVAL, UNTIL and EXDATE's). When
these are passed in a function call, the argument list becomes long and
not very readable. When support for extended recurrence rules is
implemented, the number of recurrence parameters increases, and function
signatures must be amended.
Solution: The "struct rpt" is extended with the exception list; any
future recurrence parameters are added here. A pointer to this structure
replaces the recurrence parameters in function calls.
Note: Each recurrent event and appoinment instance has (a pointer to) a
"struct rpt" and in addition an exception list. The latter is retained
to avoid the derived changes, and the exception list in the structure is
initialized to an empty list when the recurrent instance is created.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Also, prepare for extension of the structure, shorten names and
rearrange comments.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The patch adresses two issues with the function recur_item_find
ocurrence(), one major: mktime(), and one minor: item duration. In
addition, some refactoring is done.
The following recurrent appointments demonstrate the problems (as
described in the message) and are used as test cases in the associated
test commit.
03/29/2019 @ 12:00 -> 03/30/2019 @ 11:00 {2D -> 04/03/2019} |two-day - every other day - not on 1/4
03/31/2019 @ 12:00 -> 03/31/2019 @ 13:00 {1D -> 04/01/2019} |daily - not on 31/3, twice on 1/4
03/31/2019 @ 04:00 -> 03/31/2019 @ 05:00 {1W} |weekly - appears after one week
03/31/2019 @ 12:00 -> 03/31/2019 @ 12:00 {1M} |monthly - never appears
03/31/2019 @ 12:00 -> 03/31/2019 @ 12:00 {1Y} |yearly - never appears
10/20/2019 @ 00:00 -> 10/21/2019 @ 01:00 {1W -> 11/03/2019} |25 hours - ends on 27th, but continues on 28th
03/24/2019 @ 00:00 -> 03/25/2019 @ 00:00 {1W -> 04/07/2019} |24 hours - does not continue on April 1
The root cause is two mktime() calls in recur_item_find_occurrence(),
both of which use an inherited tm_isdst value in the tm structure. In
such cases mktime() will "normalize" the tm stucture if tm_isdst is 0 or
1 and in disagreement with the rest of the tm contents (just like 32 May
will be normalized to 1 June).
Example. In 2019 DST started on 31/3 at 02:00:00 (in the European
Union). If the (local) time "31/3/2018 00:00:00" is passed to mktime()
with tm_isdst = 0, the return value is (say) T sec and the tm structure
is unchanged, because DST is not in effect at midnight. If the same call
is performed with tm_isdst = 1, the return value becomes (T - 3600) sec
and the tm structure is normalized to "30/3/2018 23:00:00", tm_isdst =
0.
In recur_item_find_occurrence(), the normalized tm structure with wrong
day and time is used in ensuing calculations, leading to wrong dates and
the errors observed.
The first mktime() call is used to calculate the "day span" of the
occurrence before the occurrence itself has been determined. But once
the occurence is known, the "day span" is easily determined, and there
is no need for the first mktime() call.
Events have no explicit duration. However, recur_event_find_occurrence()
and recur_event_inday() set the duration of an event to DAYINSEC before
passing it on to recur_item_find_occurrence(). The value is not correct
on the day when DST begins or ends. The interpretation of the daylength
should be left to the called function. Hence, duration is set to -1 to
signal no (explicit) duration.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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A day begins on midnight (inclusive) and ends on midnight (exclusive). A
day as a whole is represented by the initial midnight, i.e. time-of-day
is 00:00.
On load of recurrent appointments (but not events) time-of-day for the
until day is set to 23:59. For a newly created recurrent appointment the
setting depends on the input method: time-of-day is set to 00:00 if
until day is given as a date (day, month and year), but to time-of-day
for the start day if given as an offset (+dd).
The resulting behaviour is only visible in interactive use of calcurse
as proved by the following scenario.
1) Create an appointment with start time 12:00, end time 11:59 (multi
day).
2) Turn it into a recurrent appointment of type daily, frequency 3,
until day +3.
The appointment is correctly displayed with two 2-day occurrences three
days apart.
3) Edit the appointment and select Repetition. Accept existing type,
frequency and end day (now as a date).
The second day of the second occurrence disappears.
4) Repeat 3), but set the end day as an offset (+3).
The second day of the second occurrence reappears.
The inconsistencies have been eliminated, and time-of-day for the until
day is now always 00:00.
Also, until day may equal start day, so midnights should be compared.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The calculation of the year of the most recent occurrence for year dates before
the start date (disregarding the year) is incorrect for frequencies greater than
one. The most recent occurrence (for a date as mentioned) is either too far or
too close in the past. In most cases it does no harm because the most recent
ocurrence is in the past and does not span the date (i.e. there is no occurrence
on the day). But the following appointment shows the presence of the bug:
12/31/2019 @ 12:00 -> 01/01/2020 @ 12:00 {2Y} |new year
The occurence on 1 Jan 2020 is missing, because the most recent occurrence is
too far in the past (31 Dec 2018 instead of 31 Dec 2019). An occurrence appears
on 1 Jan 2021, because the most recent occurence is too close in the past (31
Dec 2020 instead of 31 Dec 2019).
A similar miscalculation affects the monthly rule as proved by
3/31/2019 @ 12:00 -> 4/1/2019 @ 11:00 {2M} |change of month
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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An edit session, and in particular, a cancelled edit session should encompass
all parameters.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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According to RFC 5545 dates like 30 February and 31 June must be ignored
when derived from a recurrence rule.
calcurse relies on mktime() "normalization" of dates (e.g. turning 32
December 2019 into 1 January 2020 when moving from 31 December to the
next day).
Normalization may also lead to impossible dates in monthly and yearly
recurrence rules, and this must be avoided.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The exception days are presented for viewing/editing as a string of
space-separated dates (in the user-preferred input format). After
editing the string is checked for valid dates, but there is no check
that a date is meaningful (an occurrence day of the item between start
day and until day). Although possible, it is best to add exception days
in the usual way by deletion of occurrences.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Recurring appointments do not show up in the notification bar as next
appointment. This was partly corrected by 2084f35 (Fix notification of
recurrent appointments, 2017-02-09) and 5aa7a09 (Fix another error in
the notification code, 2017-02-11).
The search function recur_apoint_starts_before() had a wrong second
argument, but is really of no use: the start time of a recurring
appointment is the start time of the very first occurrence (in the
past). A comparison against the item in the notify_app structure tells
nothing of the start time of the current day; at most it eliminates some
future recurring appointments. The function can be dropped, and the
entire recurring appointment list looked through.
The proper start time is found in the main search loop (and called
real_recur_start_time) and must be compared against the item in the
notify_app structure.
But because recur_apoint_find_occurrence() is limited to a particular
day (second argument), two searches are necessary to cover 24 hours.
Unrelated cleanups: removed function return value; changed long to
time_t.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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New filter option: --filter-invert. When present it inverts (negates)
the other filter options combined. This is mostly useful with the -G
option (with -Q the output is limited by the query range (day range)).
The ouput from "calcurse -G <filter options>" is the (set) complement of
"calcurse -G <filter options> --filter-invert". Here <filter options>
may be any combination of filter options.
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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With the exception of filter.type_mask, a filter is only applied if set
explicitly on the command line with a filter option. Whether that is the
case, is determined by comparison with the initialization value. For
date related filters (start_from/to, end_from/to) that is -1, hence the
criterion is != -1, not >= 0.
In generel, a filter initialization value should be invalid (i.e. one
that cannot be set explicitly). As times before the epoch (1 January
1970 00:00:00 UTC) are negative, -1 is a valid Unix time. However, as it
cannot be set from the command line, it is probably no problem?
Signed-off-by: Lars Henriksen <LarsHenriksen@get2net.dk>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Calcurse saves time and date information on disk as local time in readable text
file format. When loaded from disk or when entered by the user, local time is
converted to Unix time (seconds since 00:00:00, 1 January 1970). When
displayed, and later when saved to disk, the Unix time is converted back to
readable local time. Both conversions depend on DST.
Hence, if midnight for a day with DST in effect (i.e. local time) is converted,
increased with an amount and converted back, the amount has changed if DST is
_not_ in effect for the resulting time. In general, calculations on Unix time
variables should be used with caution because of the DST-dependent conversions.
Instead, the calculations should be performed on local time data with the help
of mktime().
The commit fixes start time for pasted appointments (ordinary and recurrent)
and the 'until'-date of recurrent appointments, pasted as well as new and
edited. The latter problem is slightly different in that the adjustment is a
number of days, as it is for exception dates.
Update of the date in parse_datetime() has been corrected to be similar to
update of the time, although no problem has been identified.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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In addition to checking whether a recurrent item predates the current
next appointment, we need to check that the actual occurrence of the
item predates the current appointment as well.
Fixes GitHub issue #26.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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The recur_apoint_starts_before() filter function expected the second
parameter to be passed by value, whereas its only caller passed the
value by reference. For consistency with apoint_starts_after(), change
the signature and the implementation of recur_apoint_starts_before()
such that the parameter is passed by reference.
Also, add a comment to the only caller of recur_apoint_starts_before()
to clarify on why recur_apoint_starts_before() is used.
Fixes GitHub issue #25.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Make that date membership is computed correctly, even if a day has less
than 86400 seconds (e.g. after changing clocks).
Reported-by: Hakan Jerning <jerning@home.se>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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* Order by start time first.
* Order items with the same start time by priority.
* Order items with the same start and priority by description.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Implement a new --filter-hash option to filter by object identifiers.
Each object having an identifier that has the specified pattern as a
prefix is matched. Patterns starting with an exclamation mark (!) are
interpreted as negative patterns.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Add new format specifiers to print the raw item representation or an
object's hash value.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Add functions to serialize recurrent items without immediately writing
them to stdout.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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A natural convention is to specify the end time of an event as 23:59:59
on the day it is scheduled.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <lfleischer@calcurse.org>
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Start converting some variables and return values to store times from
long to time_t.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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This adds a new item filter option --filter-pattern and removes the
whole -S parameter logic, while making -S an alias for --filter-pattern.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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This adds the following filter options that allow for restricting the
set of items that are read from the appointments file:
* --filter-type
* --filter-start-from
* --filter-start-to
* --filter-start-after
* --filter-start-before
* --filter-end-from
* --filter-end-to
* --filter-end-after
* --filter-end-before
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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When switching to the generic linked list implementation for recurring
events in 9fab248 (Use generic lists for recurring apointments and
events., 2011-04-16), no initialization routine for the list of
recurring events was added. Fix this and properly initialize the list on
startup.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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Fix a couple of whitespace and line breaks. Bail out early instead of
using nested if statements.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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Exceptions do not contain a time field -- do not check time fields which
may be uninitialized.
Regression introduced in 9907069f442c56c90b67accb2d8fbd046dfce6db. This
fixes test/recur-*.sh.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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This completes our switch to the Linux kernel coding style. Note that we
still use deeply nested constructs at some places which need to be fixed
up later.
Converted using the `Lindent` script from the Linux kernel code base,
along with some manual fixes.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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Bail out when reading dates such as "02/30/2013" from the appointments
file. These *could* be converted into valid dates but since we never
write invalid dates to that file, these indicate a user error.
Fixes following test cases:
* appointment-009.sh
* appointment-012.sh
* appointment-016.sh
* appointment-019.sh
* event-003.sh
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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From the Linux kernel coding guidelines:
Do not unnecessarily use braces where a single statement will do.
[...] This does not apply if one branch of a conditional statement
is a single statement. Use braces in both branches.
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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Add 2013 to the copyright range for all source and documentation files.
Reported-by: Frederic Culot <frederic@culot.org>
Signed-off-by: Lukas Fleischer <calcurse@cryptocrack.de>
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Conflicts:
src/day.c
src/recur.c
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