This is hledger_timedot.5.info, produced by makeinfo version 6.0 from stdin.  File: hledger_timedot.5.info, Node: Top, Next: FILE FORMAT, Up: (dir) hledger_timedot(5) hledger 1.3.2 ******************************** Timedot is a plain text format for logging dated, categorised quantities (eg time), supported by hledger. It is convenient for approximate and retroactive time logging, eg when the real-time clock-in/out required with a timeclock file is too precise or too interruptive. It can be formatted like a bar chart, making clear at a glance where time was spent. Though called "timedot", the format does not specify the commodity being logged, so could represent other dated, quantifiable things. Eg you could record a single-entry journal of financial transactions, perhaps slightly more conveniently than with hledger_journal(5) format. * Menu: * FILE FORMAT::  File: hledger_timedot.5.info, Node: FILE FORMAT, Prev: Top, Up: Top 1 FILE FORMAT ************* A timedot file contains a series of day entries. A day entry begins with a date, and is followed by category/quantity pairs, one per line. Dates are hledger-style simple dates (see hledger_journal(5)). Categories are hledger-style account names, optionally indented. There must be at least two spaces between the category and the quantity. Quantities can be written in two ways: 1. a series of dots (period characters). Each dot represents "a quarter" - eg, a quarter hour. Spaces can be used to group dots into hours, for easier counting. 2. a number (integer or decimal), representing "units" - eg, hours. A good alternative when dots are cumbersome. (A number also can record negative quantities.) Blank lines and lines beginning with #, ; or * are ignored. An example: # on this day, 6h was spent on client work, 1.5h on haskell FOSS work, etc. 2016/2/1 inc:client1 .... .... .... .... .... .... fos:haskell .... .. biz:research . 2016/2/2 inc:client1 .... .... biz:research . Or with numbers: 2016/2/3 inc:client1 4 fos:hledger 3 biz:research 1 Reporting: $ hledger -f t.timedot print date:2016/2/2 2016/02/02 * (inc:client1) 2.00 2016/02/02 * (biz:research) 0.25 $ hledger -f t.timedot bal --daily --tree Balance changes in 2016/02/01-2016/02/03: || 2016/02/01d 2016/02/02d 2016/02/03d ============++======================================== biz || 0.25 0.25 1.00 research || 0.25 0.25 1.00 fos || 1.50 0 3.00 haskell || 1.50 0 0 hledger || 0 0 3.00 inc || 6.00 2.00 4.00 client1 || 6.00 2.00 4.00 ------------++---------------------------------------- || 7.75 2.25 8.00 I prefer to use period for separating account components. We can make this work with an account alias: 2016/2/4 fos.hledger.timedot 4 fos.ledger .. $ hledger -f t.timedot --alias /\\./=: bal date:2016/2/4 4.50 fos 4.00 hledger:timedot 0.50 ledger -------------------- 4.50 Here is a sample.timedot.  Tag Table: Node: Top78 Node: FILE FORMAT886 Ref: #file-format989  End Tag Table