trusty (4) plan.4.gz

Provided by: plan_1.10.1-2.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       ~/.dayplan - database file of plan(1)

SYNOPSIS

DESCRIPTION

       The ~/.dayplan file is read and written by the plan and pland programs. It can be edited manually, but it
       has not been designed for this. Generally, the format is annoyingly unmnemonic, and there is virtually no
       error  checking. Use at your own risk. The only reason I didn't make this a binary file is that I dislike
       binary config files as a matter of principle.

       The type of every line depends on the first character of the line.  The  second  character  is  always  a
       single  TAB  character.  All  following  characters  are  arguments.  Comments and blank lines (which are
       ignored) can appear anywhere. "Header types" are all at the beginning of the file before the first "entry
       type".

       TYPES THAT CAN APPEAR ANYWHERE:

       #      Comment line. The rest of the line is ignored.

       HEADER TYPES:

       o      Options.  The  argument  consists of 14 consecutive flag characters, and five numerical arguments.
              In order, the flags are:

              s      sunday first

              a      12-hour (am/pm) mode

              m      US date format mm/dd/yy

              d      auto-delete past options

              j      show julian dates

              w      show week numbers

              n      show the next three notes, rather than the first three

              -      always a minus sign, not used (used to be warning popup mode)

              w      show advance warnings graphically in week view

              u      show file names next to note strings in week view

              b      show appointments without time as full-width bar in week views

              -      if "w", the first week of the year is the one with full  seven  days;  if  "t",  the  first
                     Thursday controls which week is the first; otherwise, any partial week is first

              c      use  group  color  of other file appointments as the background color for the text of these
                     appointments in the day boxes in the month view

              o      turn the own-only flag in appointment entry menus on by default, and only show appointments
                     from the main ~/.dayplan file.

              After the flags, there is a sequence of integers:

              -      default early warning time in seconds

              -      default late warning time in seconds

              -      expiration time of notifier windows in seconds; 0 means notifiers never expire

              -      beginning hour of week views, default is 8 (8:00 o'clock)

              -      ending hour of week views, default is 20 (20:00 o'clock)

              -      the number of days displayed in a week view, 1..28, default is 7

       O      More  options.  The  argument consists of 24 consecutive flag characters, most of which are unused
              and reserved for future use. '-' means an option is off, everything else means the option  is  on.
              In order, the flags are:

              s      use the main window for all views

              a      resize windows if the contents change

       t      Time  adjustment parameters as defined with the Adjust Time popup. The five numeric parameters are
              the offset to the system clock in seconds, the timezone offset in seconds, the DST flag  (0=always
              on, 1=always off, 2=automatic), and the Julian begin and end dates for automatic DST.

       e      Early warning flags,

       l      Late warning flags, and

       a      alarm flags:
              These  three  have  the same format. The first three argument chars are flags, as specified in the
              Alarm Options popup. '-' means the flag is off, everything else means the flag is  on.  In  order,
              the flags are:

              w      show a color-coded window when the warning/alarm triggers

              m      send mail when the warning/alarm triggers

              x      execute a command when the warning/alarm triggers

              The  flags are followed by a single blank. The rest of the line is the command to execute when the
              warning/alarm triggers and the 'x' flag is on.

       y      Year overview options. There are 10 consecutive flag characters  and  three  numerical  arguments.
              Only one flag is currently defined:

              s      show single-day appointments too (those with a repeat-every count of 1)

              -      nine unused flags that must be present, all '-'

              After the flags, there is a sequence of integers:

              -      the number of months (zoom factor) that fills one screenful

              -      The  display  mode  is  0 for the default files as defined in the file list menu, 1 for all
                     files, 2 for own appointments only, and 2 for the file defined by the following number.

              -      the number of the file whose appointments are displayed if the previous number is 3.

       P      The PostScript printing options. Ten flag characters, followed by a blank and the print mode:

              a      omit all appointments from the printout

              p      omit all private appointments from the printout

              -      eight unused flags that must be present, all '-'

              -      the mode: 0 for month, 1 for year, 2 for landscape week, and 3 for portrait week

       p      The print spooling string. When printing a PostScript calendar, the PostScript  code  is  sent  to
              stdin of this command.

       m      The  mailer  program,  as  specified  in  the Alarm Options menu. Up to one "%s" is allowed, it is
              replaced by the (quoted) note string.  "%s" is typically used for a subject.

       U      This code is obsolete since version 1.5.

       u      One file in the file list. There are five arguments (the order is strange because the  month  flag
              has been added later in version 1.4):

              -      the file (login) name

              -      the file path

              -      0 if the file is shown in week views, 1 if the file is suspended

              -      the color used in the week view, a number in the range 0..7

              -      0 if the file is shown in month views, 1 if the file is suspended

              -      0 if appointments from this file are silent, 1 if they can trigger their alarms

       ENTRY TYPES:

       [0-9]  Begins  an  entry.  This  is  the  only  mandatory  line, all others that follow are optional. All
              following lines that do not begin with a numeric digit are extra information for the entry. Unlike
              all  other types, there is no TAB character in the second column, the first character is the first
              digit of the trigger date.

              The line consists of five date/time fields, seperated by  at  least  one  blank,  and  three  flag
              characters  that  must  be  consecutive.  As  usual, flags are off if the character is '-', and on
              otherwise. The fields are:

              1/2/3    trigger date, month/day/year. Year can be either 70..99,00..38, or  1970..2038.   Do  not
                       enter appointments after 2037. If there is demand, I'll fix this bug in about 50 years.

              1:2:3    trigger  time,  hour:minutes:seconds,  in 24-hour format. 99:99:99 means that there is no
                       alarm time ("-" in the time column).

              1:2:3    length, hour:minutes:seconds, in 24-hour format

              1:2:3    early-warning time, hour:minutes:seconds, in 24-hour format,  0:0:0  means  there  is  no
                       early warning

              1:2:3    late-warning  time, hour:minutes:seconds, in 24-hour format, 0:0:0 means there is no late
                       warning

              S        suspended (the green button at the left edge is off)

              P        private (goes into the private dayplan file that has mode 0600)

              N        no alarm (trigger warnings if nonzero, but no final alarm)

              M        do not show this appointment in the month view

              Y        do not show this appointment in the year view

              W        do not show this appointment in the week view

              O        do not show this appointment in the year overview

              D        do not show this appointment in the day view

              t        this is an active todo item, move to today if in the past

              -        one unused flag, always '-'

              0        appointment text color in month calendar: 0 is default, 1..8 are colors

              0        show a warning this many days in advance: 0 means never, 1 means one day ahead, etc.

       E      Add an exception date to the appointment. After the 'E', a tab and  a  date  m/d/y  on  which  the
              appointment  will  not trigger follow. There can be up to four 'E' lines for each appointment (see
              NEXC in conf.h).

       R      Add repetition information to the current entry. There are five numeric fields,  separated  by  at
              least one blank. This one is particularly unsuited for human consumption, sorry.

              1      trigger alarm every <1> days (in seconds)

              2      delete alarm after this date (seconds since 1/1/70 0:00:00)

              3      weekday bitmap and nth-week bitmap:
                     bit0=sunday ... bit6=saturday
                     bit8=first ... bit12=fifth, bit13=last

              4      month day bitmap, bit0=last day of the month, bits 1..31=on that day of the month

              5      if 1, the entry repeats every year; if 0, it doesn't.

       N      Add  a  note  string to the current entry. All characters that follow the TAB are part of the note
              string.

       M      Add another line to the current entry's message. All characters that follow the TAB  are  part  of
              the line. There can be multiple M lines, they all add to the message.

       S      Add another line to the current entry's script. All characters that follow the TAB are part of the
              line. There can be multiple S lines, they all add to the script.

       G      Reserved for group meetings, not currently used.

                                                                                                         PLAN(4)