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Write a journal

Project description

Build Status PyPI PyPI - Python Version Code style: black

jrnl

jrnl is a personal journal management application.

Usage

Setup

Set up your journal by printing out a config file, like so:

jrnl --setup

and fill out the path to the root of your journal.

Using jrnl

Open up today's journal entry with

jrnl

which will open up today's journal entry in your favourite text editor.

Using jrnl grep

jrnl also comes with a grep wrapper which you can invoke as follows:

jrnl grep [OPTIONS] PATTERN

where OPTIONS are normal grep options.

Advanced usage

Timestamps

You can generate a timestamp before opening the entry by using the -t flag:

jrnl -t

or you can have timestamps always written by specifying so in your config file.

Negative date offsets

You can open up another date's journal entry by specifying a date as an argument. One way of doing this is with negative date offsets: for example, to open up yesterday's journal run

jrnl -1

Fuzzy dates

Another way to pass a date to jrnl is with a date string (wrapped in quotes if it contains spaces). jrnl uses dateutil's fuzzy date parser to parse the strings you pass in, which lets you specify dates like "Nov 7 2017":

jrnl "Nov 7 2017"

dateutil can do more: for example, specifying the 4th of the current month's date with

jrnl 4

Accessing the latest existing entry

You can open the latest existing journal entry with HEAD like so:

jrnl HEAD

Aliases for HEAD are LAST and LATEST—all of which are case insensitive.

Accessing an existing entry's ancestor

You can access the ancestor of an existing entry with suffixes ^ or ~N (for the Nth ancestor). These work almost identically to the same suffixes in git. For example, to find the fifth last existing journal enty, you can do

jrnl HEAD~5

These suffixes can be stacked and combined in any way you like.

Accessing the closest existing entry to a given date

To access the closest existing journal entry for a given date, add the @ suffix to the date. For example, to find the closest entry to 2017-01-01, you'd do

jrnl @2017-01-01

Opening multiple entries

To open up multiple entries simply pass in multiple date arguments. For example,

jrnl -7 "Jan 01 2016" 20180504

will open entries for a week ago, 2018-01-01, and 2018-05-04.

Extending a date past midnight

If in your config file you have

hours_past_midnight_included_in_date: N

where N is some postive integer; then for a given date, at 0N:00 or earlier, jrnl will open up the day before's journal entry.

:confused: What? Here's the motivation:

When it's 02:00, we're likely to refer to this time as night, rather than morning. Likewise, you might want a journal chunk (for lack of a better term) written at 02:00 to be in the same entry as chunks from (technically) the previous day. If you do want such a thing, you can specify a time in your config file: at any time before this specified time (inclusive), jrnl will open up the day before's journal entry.

Journal structure

Right now you're constrained to having a journal structure like so:

journal_root/
journal_root/2017/
journal_root/2017/2017-07-05.txt
journal_root/2017/2017-09-01.txt

and if you want to use all the features you're going to need to be okay with ISO 8601-based timestamps:

2017-09-01
21:06

You'd write stuff here.

22:30

And more stuff here.

How do I install this?

sudo pip3 install jrnl-mw

or just run the run_jrnl.py script directly.

Project details


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jrnl-mw-1.3.4.tar.gz (14.9 kB view hashes)

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