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track project hours
To start tracking hours, just do clocker start
:
$ clocker start -t BAZCORP
The -t
is optional.
Some hours pass, then:
$ clocker stop
Run clocker start
and clocker stop
as you have more hours to track.
You can list the hours you've racked up with clocker list
:
$ clocker list
1392707136 2014-02-17 [ 23:05:36 - 02:15:00 ] (03:09:24) [BAZCORP]
1392751800 2014-02-18 [ 11:30:00 - 16:20:00 ] (04:50:00) [BAZCORP]
1393020600 2014-02-21 [ 14:10:00 - 18:32:00 ] (04:22:00) [BAZCORP]
You can see a report of all logged hours of a specific day with clocker report
command:
$ clocker report --reportDay 2018-05-23
Report for 23 May 2018:
1527053106 2018-05-23 [ 07:25:06 - 08:09:25 ] (00:44:19) [TYPE_A]
1527056838 2018-05-23 [ 08:27:18 - 11:30:00 ] (03:02:42) [TYPE_B]
1527067800 2018-05-23 [ 11:30:00 - 11:58:18 ] (00:28:18) [TYPE_C]
1527073296 2018-05-23 [ 13:01:36 - 16:31:54 ] (03:30:18) [TYPE_B]
TYPE_A: 00:44:19
TYPE_B: 06:33:00
TYPE_C: 00:28:18
total: 07:45:37
Without the --reportDay
option, the report command will list all logged hours of the current day.
You can generate a json dump with clocker data
:
$ clocker data BAZCORP --rate 125
[
{
"title": "consulting",
"rate": 125,
"hours": [
{
"date": "2014-02-18",
"hours": 7.1
},
{
"date": "2014-02-17",
"hours": 0.9
},
{
"date": "2014-02-21",
"hours": 4.4
}
]
}
]
This json output can be fed into invoicer to generate a PDF invoice:
$ clocker data BAZCORP --rate 125 | invoicer -r BAZCORP -o invoice.pdf
usage:
clocker start {-t TYPE, -m MESSAGE} [-- DATA]
Start the clock. Optionally give a TYPE and MESSAGE.
Optionally set additional DATA in the format --KEY=VALUE.
clocker stop {-m MESSAGE}
Stop the clock.
clocker restart [STAMP]
Restart either last clock or clock at STAMP.
clocker status
Show the elapsed time if the clock is active or "stopped".
clocker data {-t TYPE, -r RATE, --title TITLE, --gt DATE, --lt DATE, -a}
Generate invoicer-compatible json output.
Show dates between lt and gt. Show archived dates with -a.
Optionally filter by TYPE, a string or /regex/.
clocker list {-v, --gt DATE, --lt DATE, -a, -t TYPE}
Show hourly data with STAMPS on the leftmost column.
In verbose mode (-v), also show clocked messages.
Show dates between lt and gt. Show archived dates with -a.
Optionally filter by TYPE, a string or /regex/.
clocker report {-v, --reportDay DATE}
Show all logged hours of a specific day.
In verbose mode (-v), also show clocked messages.
If no --reportDay is set, the current day will be used.
clocker csv {--gt DATE, --lt DATE, --props FIELDS, -a}
Generate CSV output.
Show dates between lt and gt. Show archived dates with -a.
Additionally display the properties FIELDS.
clocker add START END {-t TYPE, -m MESSAGE}
Add a hours from START to END as date strings.
clocker get STAMP
Get the data at STAMP.
clocker rm STAMP...
Remove the data at STAMP.
clocker set [STAMP] KEY VALUE
Adjust time stamp boundaries or other properties of either last clock
or clock at STAMP.
Time stamp boundaries are parsed, like '20:11' or '10 minutes ago'.
clocker edit STAMP {KEY}
Launch $EDITOR to edit the record at STAMP.
Optionally edit a single KEY.
clocker archive {--lt=DATE, --gt=DATE}
clocker archive [STAMP...]
Archive a range of clocked records or a list of STAMPs.
clocker unarchive {--lt=DATE, --gt=DATE}
clocker unarchive [STAMP...]
Un-archive a range of clocked records or a list of STAMPs.
With npm do:
npm install -g clocker
to get the clocker command.
MIT
FAQs
track project hours
The npm package clocker receives a total of 7 weekly downloads. As such, clocker popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that clocker demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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