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[bpt/emacs.git] / man / calendar.texi
1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985, 1986, 1987, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2001,
3 @c 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5 @node Calendar/Diary, Gnus, Dired, Top
6 @chapter The Calendar and the Diary
7 @cindex calendar
8 @findex calendar
9
10 Emacs provides the functions of a desk calendar, with a diary of
11 planned or past events. It also has facilities for managing your
12 appointments, and keeping track of how much time you spend working on
13 certain projects.
14
15 To enter the calendar, type @kbd{M-x calendar}; this displays a
16 three-month calendar centered on the current month, with point on the
17 current date. With a numeric argument, as in @kbd{C-u M-x calendar}, it
18 prompts you for the month and year to be the center of the three-month
19 calendar. The calendar uses its own buffer, whose major mode is
20 Calendar mode.
21
22 @kbd{Mouse-2} in the calendar brings up a menu of operations on a
23 particular date; @kbd{Mouse-3} brings up a menu of commonly used
24 calendar features that are independent of any particular date. To exit
25 the calendar, type @kbd{q}.
26
27 @iftex
28 This chapter describes the basic calendar features.
29 @inforef{Advanced Calendar/Diary Usage,, emacs-xtra}, for information
30 about more specialized features.
31 @end iftex
32
33 @menu
34 * Calendar Motion:: Moving through the calendar; selecting a date.
35 * Scroll Calendar:: Bringing earlier or later months onto the screen.
36 * Counting Days:: How many days are there between two dates?
37 * General Calendar:: Exiting or recomputing the calendar.
38 * Writing Calendar Files:: Writing calendars to files of various formats.
39 * Holidays:: Displaying dates of holidays.
40 * Sunrise/Sunset:: Displaying local times of sunrise and sunset.
41 * Lunar Phases:: Displaying phases of the moon.
42 * Other Calendars:: Converting dates to other calendar systems.
43 * Diary:: Displaying events from your diary.
44 * Appointments:: Reminders when it's time to do something.
45 * Importing Diary:: Converting diary events to/from other formats.
46 * Daylight Savings:: How to specify when daylight savings time is active.
47 * Time Intervals:: Keeping track of time intervals.
48 @ifnottex
49 * Advanced Calendar/Diary Usage:: Advanced Calendar/Diary customization.
50 @end ifnottex
51 @end menu
52
53 @node Calendar Motion
54 @section Movement in the Calendar
55
56 @cindex moving inside the calendar
57 Calendar mode provides commands to move through the calendar in
58 logical units of time such as days, weeks, months, and years. If you
59 move outside the three months originally displayed, the calendar
60 display ``scrolls'' automatically through time to make the selected
61 date visible. Moving to a date lets you view its holidays or diary
62 entries, or convert it to other calendars; moving by long time periods
63 is also useful simply to scroll the calendar.
64
65 @menu
66 * Calendar Unit Motion:: Moving by days, weeks, months, and years.
67 * Move to Beginning or End:: Moving to start/end of weeks, months, and years.
68 * Specified Dates:: Moving to the current date or another
69 specific date.
70 @end menu
71
72 @node Calendar Unit Motion
73 @subsection Motion by Standard Lengths of Time
74
75 The commands for movement in the calendar buffer parallel the
76 commands for movement in text. You can move forward and backward by
77 days, weeks, months, and years.
78
79 @table @kbd
80 @item C-f
81 Move point one day forward (@code{calendar-forward-day}).
82 @item C-b
83 Move point one day backward (@code{calendar-backward-day}).
84 @item C-n
85 Move point one week forward (@code{calendar-forward-week}).
86 @item C-p
87 Move point one week backward (@code{calendar-backward-week}).
88 @item M-@}
89 Move point one month forward (@code{calendar-forward-month}).
90 @item M-@{
91 Move point one month backward (@code{calendar-backward-month}).
92 @item C-x ]
93 Move point one year forward (@code{calendar-forward-year}).
94 @item C-x [
95 Move point one year backward (@code{calendar-backward-year}).
96 @end table
97
98 @kindex C-f @r{(Calendar mode)}
99 @findex calendar-forward-day
100 @kindex C-b @r{(Calendar mode)}
101 @findex calendar-backward-day
102 @kindex C-n @r{(Calendar mode)}
103 @findex calendar-forward-week
104 @kindex C-p @r{(Calendar mode)}
105 @findex calendar-backward-week
106 The day and week commands are natural analogues of the usual Emacs
107 commands for moving by characters and by lines. Just as @kbd{C-n}
108 usually moves to the same column in the following line, in Calendar
109 mode it moves to the same day in the following week. And @kbd{C-p}
110 moves to the same day in the previous week.
111
112 The arrow keys are equivalent to @kbd{C-f}, @kbd{C-b}, @kbd{C-n} and
113 @kbd{C-p}, just as they normally are in other modes.
114
115 @kindex M-@} @r{(Calendar mode)}
116 @findex calendar-forward-month
117 @kindex M-@{ @r{(Calendar mode)}
118 @findex calendar-backward-month
119 @kindex C-x ] @r{(Calendar mode)}
120 @findex calendar-forward-year
121 @kindex C-x [ @r{(Calendar mode)}
122 @findex calendar-forward-year
123 The commands for motion by months and years work like those for
124 weeks, but move a larger distance. The month commands @kbd{M-@}} and
125 @kbd{M-@{} move forward or backward by an entire month. The year
126 commands @kbd{C-x ]} and @w{@kbd{C-x [}} move forward or backward a
127 whole year.
128
129 The easiest way to remember these commands is to consider months and
130 years analogous to paragraphs and pages of text, respectively. But
131 the commands themselves are not quite analogous. The ordinary Emacs
132 paragraph commands move to the beginning or end of a paragraph,
133 whereas these month and year commands move by an entire month or an
134 entire year, keeping the same date within the month or year.
135
136 All these commands accept a numeric argument as a repeat count.
137 For convenience, the digit keys and the minus sign specify numeric
138 arguments in Calendar mode even without the Meta modifier. For example,
139 @kbd{100 C-f} moves point 100 days forward from its present location.
140
141 @node Move to Beginning or End
142 @subsection Beginning or End of Week, Month or Year
143
144 A week (or month, or year) is not just a quantity of days; we think of
145 weeks (months, years) as starting on particular dates. So Calendar mode
146 provides commands to move to the beginning or end of a week, month or
147 year:
148
149 @table @kbd
150 @kindex C-a @r{(Calendar mode)}
151 @findex calendar-beginning-of-week
152 @item C-a
153 Move point to start of week (@code{calendar-beginning-of-week}).
154 @kindex C-e @r{(Calendar mode)}
155 @findex calendar-end-of-week
156 @item C-e
157 Move point to end of week (@code{calendar-end-of-week}).
158 @kindex M-a @r{(Calendar mode)}
159 @findex calendar-beginning-of-month
160 @item M-a
161 Move point to start of month (@code{calendar-beginning-of-month}).
162 @kindex M-e @r{(Calendar mode)}
163 @findex calendar-end-of-month
164 @item M-e
165 Move point to end of month (@code{calendar-end-of-month}).
166 @kindex M-< @r{(Calendar mode)}
167 @findex calendar-beginning-of-year
168 @item M-<
169 Move point to start of year (@code{calendar-beginning-of-year}).
170 @kindex M-> @r{(Calendar mode)}
171 @findex calendar-end-of-year
172 @item M->
173 Move point to end of year (@code{calendar-end-of-year}).
174 @end table
175
176 These commands also take numeric arguments as repeat counts, with the
177 repeat count indicating how many weeks, months, or years to move
178 backward or forward.
179
180 @vindex calendar-week-start-day
181 @cindex weeks, which day they start on
182 @cindex calendar, first day of week
183 By default, weeks begin on Sunday. To make them begin on Monday
184 instead, set the variable @code{calendar-week-start-day} to 1.
185
186 @node Specified Dates
187 @subsection Specified Dates
188
189 Calendar mode provides commands for moving to a particular date
190 specified in various ways.
191
192 @table @kbd
193 @item g d
194 Move point to specified date (@code{calendar-goto-date}).
195 @item g D
196 Move point to specified day of year (@code{calendar-goto-day-of-year}).
197 @item g w
198 Move point to specified week of year (@code{calendar-goto-iso-week}).
199 @item o
200 Center calendar around specified month (@code{calendar-other-month}).
201 @item .
202 Move point to today's date (@code{calendar-goto-today}).
203 @end table
204
205 @kindex g d @r{(Calendar mode)}
206 @findex calendar-goto-date
207 @kbd{g d} (@code{calendar-goto-date}) prompts for a year, a month, and a day
208 of the month, and then moves to that date. Because the calendar includes all
209 dates from the beginning of the current era, you must type the year in its
210 entirety; that is, type @samp{1990}, not @samp{90}.
211
212 @kindex g D @r{(Calendar mode)}
213 @findex calendar-goto-day-of-year
214 @kindex g w @r{(Calendar mode)}
215 @findex calendar-goto-iso-week
216 @kbd{g D} (@code{calendar-goto-day-of-year}) prompts for a year and
217 day number, and moves to that date. Negative day numbers count
218 backward from the end of the year. @kbd{g w}
219 (@code{calendar-goto-iso-week}) prompts for a year and week number,
220 and moves to that week.
221
222 @kindex o @r{(Calendar mode)}
223 @findex calendar-other-month
224 @kbd{o} (@code{calendar-other-month}) prompts for a month and year,
225 then centers the three-month calendar around that month.
226
227 @kindex . @r{(Calendar mode)}
228 @findex calendar-goto-today
229 You can return to today's date with @kbd{.}@:
230 (@code{calendar-goto-today}).
231
232 @node Scroll Calendar
233 @section Scrolling in the Calendar
234
235 @cindex scrolling in the calendar
236 The calendar display scrolls automatically through time when you
237 move out of the visible portion. You can also scroll it manually.
238 Imagine that the calendar window contains a long strip of paper with
239 the months on it. Scrolling the calendar means moving the strip
240 horizontally, so that new months become visible in the window.
241
242 @table @kbd
243 @item >
244 Scroll calendar one month forward (@code{scroll-calendar-left}).
245 @item <
246 Scroll calendar one month backward (@code{scroll-calendar-right}).
247 @item C-v
248 @itemx @key{NEXT}
249 Scroll calendar three months forward
250 (@code{scroll-calendar-left-three-months}).
251 @item M-v
252 @itemx @key{PRIOR}
253 Scroll calendar three months backward
254 (@code{scroll-calendar-right-three-months}).
255 @end table
256
257 @kindex > @r{(Calendar mode)}
258 @findex scroll-calendar-left
259 @kindex < @r{(Calendar mode)}
260 @findex scroll-calendar-right
261 The most basic calendar scroll commands scroll by one month at a
262 time. This means that there are two months of overlap between the
263 display before the command and the display after. @kbd{>} scrolls the
264 calendar contents one month forward in time. @kbd{<} scrolls the
265 contents one month backwards in time.
266
267 @kindex C-v @r{(Calendar mode)}
268 @findex scroll-calendar-left-three-months
269 @kindex M-v @r{(Calendar mode)}
270 @findex scroll-calendar-right-three-months
271 The commands @kbd{C-v} and @kbd{M-v} scroll the calendar by an entire
272 ``screenful''---three months---in analogy with the usual meaning of
273 these commands. @kbd{C-v} makes later dates visible and @kbd{M-v} makes
274 earlier dates visible. These commands take a numeric argument as a
275 repeat count; in particular, since @kbd{C-u} multiplies the next command
276 by four, typing @kbd{C-u C-v} scrolls the calendar forward by a year and
277 typing @kbd{C-u M-v} scrolls the calendar backward by a year.
278
279 The function keys @key{NEXT} and @key{PRIOR} are equivalent to
280 @kbd{C-v} and @kbd{M-v}, just as they are in other modes.
281
282 @node Counting Days
283 @section Counting Days
284
285 @table @kbd
286 @item M-=
287 Display the number of days in the current region
288 (@code{calendar-count-days-region}).
289 @end table
290
291 @kindex M-= @r{(Calendar mode)}
292 @findex calendar-count-days-region
293 To determine the number of days in the region, type @kbd{M-=}
294 (@code{calendar-count-days-region}). The numbers of days shown is
295 @emph{inclusive}; that is, it includes the days specified by mark and
296 point.
297
298 @node General Calendar
299 @section Miscellaneous Calendar Commands
300
301 @table @kbd
302 @item p d
303 Display day-in-year (@code{calendar-print-day-of-year}).
304 @item C-c C-l
305 Regenerate the calendar window (@code{redraw-calendar}).
306 @item SPC
307 Scroll the next window up (@code{scroll-other-window}).
308 @item DEL
309 Scroll the next window down (@code{scroll-other-window-down}).
310 @item q
311 Exit from calendar (@code{exit-calendar}).
312 @end table
313
314 @kindex p d @r{(Calendar mode)}
315 @cindex day of year
316 @findex calendar-print-day-of-year
317 To display the number of days elapsed since the start of the year, or
318 the number of days remaining in the year, type the @kbd{p d} command
319 (@code{calendar-print-day-of-year}). This displays both of those
320 numbers in the echo area. The count of days elapsed includes the
321 selected date. The count of days remaining does not include that
322 date.
323
324 @kindex C-c C-l @r{(Calendar mode)}
325 @findex redraw-calendar
326 If the calendar window text gets corrupted, type @kbd{C-c C-l}
327 (@code{redraw-calendar}) to redraw it. (This can only happen if you use
328 non-Calendar-mode editing commands.)
329
330 @kindex SPC @r{(Calendar mode)}
331 In Calendar mode, you can use @kbd{SPC} (@code{scroll-other-window})
332 and @kbd{DEL} (@code{scroll-other-window-down}) to scroll the other
333 window up or down, respectively. This is handy when you display a list
334 of holidays or diary entries in another window.
335
336 @kindex q @r{(Calendar mode)}
337 @findex exit-calendar
338 To exit from the calendar, type @kbd{q} (@code{exit-calendar}). This
339 buries all buffers related to the calendar, selecting other buffers.
340 (If a frame contains a dedicated calendar window, exiting from the
341 calendar iconifies that frame.)
342
343 @node Writing Calendar Files
344 @section Writing Calendar Files
345
346 These packages produce files of various formats containing calendar
347 and diary entries, for display purposes.
348
349 @cindex calendar and HTML
350 The Calendar HTML commands produce files of HTML code that contain
351 calendar and diary entries. Each file applies to one month, and has a
352 name of the format @file{@var{yyyy}-@var{mm}.html}, where @var{yyyy} and
353 @var{mm} are the four-digit year and two-digit month, respectively. The
354 variable @code{cal-html-directory} specifies the default output
355 directory for the HTML files.
356
357 @vindex cal-html-css-default
358 Diary entries enclosed by @code{<} and @code{>} are interpreted as
359 HTML tags (for example: this is a diary entry with <font
360 color=''red''>some red text</font>). You can change the overall
361 appearance of the displayed HTML pages (for example, the color of
362 various page elements, header styles) via a stylesheet @file{cal.css} in
363 the directory containing the HTML files (see the value of the variable
364 @code{cal-html-css-default} for relevant style settings).
365
366 @kindex t @r{(Calendar mode)}
367 @table @kbd
368 @item H m
369 Generate a one-month calendar (@code{cal-html-cursor-month}).
370 @item H y
371 Generate a calendar file for each month of a year, as well as an index
372 page (@code{cal-html-cursor-year}). By default, this command writes
373 files to a @var{yyyy} subdirectory - if this is altered some hyperlinks
374 between years will not work.
375 @end table
376
377 If the variable @code{cal-html-print-day-number-flag} is
378 non-@code{nil}, then the monthly calendars show the day-of-the-year
379 number. The variable @code{cal-html-year-index-cols} specifies the
380 number of columns in the yearly index page.
381
382 @cindex calendar and La@TeX{}
383 The Calendar La@TeX{} commands produce a buffer of La@TeX{} code that
384 prints as a calendar. Depending on the command you use, the printed
385 calendar covers the day, week, month or year that point is in.
386
387 @kindex t @r{(Calendar mode)}
388 @table @kbd
389 @item t m
390 Generate a one-month calendar (@code{cal-tex-cursor-month}).
391 @item t M
392 Generate a sideways-printing one-month calendar
393 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-month-landscape}).
394 @item t d
395 Generate a one-day calendar
396 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-day}).
397 @item t w 1
398 Generate a one-page calendar for one week
399 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-week}).
400 @item t w 2
401 Generate a two-page calendar for one week
402 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-week2}).
403 @item t w 3
404 Generate an ISO-style calendar for one week
405 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-week-iso}).
406 @item t w 4
407 Generate a calendar for one Monday-starting week
408 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-week-monday}).
409 @item t f w
410 Generate a Filofax-style two-weeks-at-a-glance calendar
411 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-filofax-2week}).
412 @item t f W
413 Generate a Filofax-style one-week-at-a-glance calendar
414 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-filofax-week}).
415 @item t y
416 Generate a calendar for one year
417 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-year}).
418 @item t Y
419 Generate a sideways-printing calendar for one year
420 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-year-landscape}).
421 @item t f y
422 Generate a Filofax-style calendar for one year
423 (@code{cal-tex-cursor-filofax-year}).
424 @end table
425
426 Some of these commands print the calendar sideways (in ``landscape
427 mode''), so it can be wider than it is long. Some of them use Filofax
428 paper size (3.75in x 6.75in). All of these commands accept a prefix
429 argument which specifies how many days, weeks, months or years to print
430 (starting always with the selected one).
431
432 If the variable @code{cal-tex-holidays} is non-@code{nil} (the default),
433 then the printed calendars show the holidays in @code{calendar-holidays}.
434 If the variable @code{cal-tex-diary} is non-@code{nil} (the default is
435 @code{nil}), diary entries are included also (in weekly and monthly
436 calendars only). If the variable @code{cal-tex-rules} is non-@code{nil}
437 (the default is @code{nil}), the calendar displays ruled pages
438 in styles that have sufficient room. You can use the variable
439 @code{cal-tex-preamble-extra} to insert extra La@TeX{} commands in the
440 preamble of the generated document if you need to.
441
442 @node Holidays
443 @section Holidays
444 @cindex holidays
445
446 The Emacs calendar knows about all major and many minor holidays,
447 and can display them.
448
449 @table @kbd
450 @item h
451 Display holidays for the selected date
452 (@code{calendar-cursor-holidays}).
453 @item Mouse-2 Holidays
454 Display any holidays for the date you click on.
455 @item x
456 Mark holidays in the calendar window (@code{mark-calendar-holidays}).
457 @item u
458 Unmark calendar window (@code{calendar-unmark}).
459 @item a
460 List all holidays for the displayed three months in another window
461 (@code{list-calendar-holidays}).
462 @item M-x holidays
463 List all holidays for three months around today's date in another
464 window.
465 @item M-x list-holidays
466 List holidays in another window for a specified range of years.
467 @end table
468
469 @kindex h @r{(Calendar mode)}
470 @findex calendar-cursor-holidays
471 @vindex view-calendar-holidays-initially
472 To see if any holidays fall on a given date, position point on that
473 date in the calendar window and use the @kbd{h} command. Alternatively,
474 click on that date with @kbd{Mouse-2} and then choose @kbd{Holidays}
475 from the menu that appears. Either way, this displays the holidays for
476 that date, in the echo area if they fit there, otherwise in a separate
477 window.
478
479 @kindex x @r{(Calendar mode)}
480 @findex mark-calendar-holidays
481 @kindex u @r{(Calendar mode)}
482 @findex calendar-unmark
483 @vindex mark-holidays-in-calendar
484 To view the distribution of holidays for all the dates shown in the
485 calendar, use the @kbd{x} command. This displays the dates that are
486 holidays in a different face (or places a @samp{*} after these dates, if
487 display with multiple faces is not available).
488 @iftex
489 @inforef{Calendar Customizing, calendar-holiday-marker, emacs-xtra}.
490 @end iftex
491 @ifnottex
492 @xref{Calendar Customizing, calendar-holiday-marker}.
493 @end ifnottex
494 The command applies both to the currently visible months and to
495 other months that subsequently become visible by scrolling. To turn
496 marking off and erase the current marks, type @kbd{u}, which also
497 erases any diary marks (@pxref{Diary}). If the variable
498 @code{mark-holidays-in-calendar} is non-@code{nil}, creating or
499 updating the calendar marks holidays automatically.
500
501 @kindex a @r{(Calendar mode)}
502 @findex list-calendar-holidays
503 To get even more detailed information, use the @kbd{a} command, which
504 displays a separate buffer containing a list of all holidays in the
505 current three-month range. You can use @key{SPC} and @key{DEL} in the
506 calendar window to scroll that list up and down, respectively.
507
508 @findex holidays
509 The command @kbd{M-x holidays} displays the list of holidays for the
510 current month and the preceding and succeeding months; this works even
511 if you don't have a calendar window. If the variable
512 @code{view-calendar-holidays-initially} is non-@code{nil}, creating
513 the calendar displays holidays in this way. If you want the list of
514 holidays centered around a different month, use @kbd{C-u M-x
515 holidays}, which prompts for the month and year.
516
517 The holidays known to Emacs include United States holidays and the
518 major Christian, Jewish, and Islamic holidays; also the solstices and
519 equinoxes.
520
521 @findex list-holidays
522 The command @kbd{M-x list-holidays} displays the list of holidays for
523 a range of years. This function asks you for the starting and stopping
524 years, and allows you to choose all the holidays or one of several
525 categories of holidays. You can use this command even if you don't have
526 a calendar window.
527
528 The dates used by Emacs for holidays are based on @emph{current
529 practice}, not historical fact. For example Veteran's Day began in
530 1919, but is shown in earlier years.
531
532 @node Sunrise/Sunset
533 @section Times of Sunrise and Sunset
534 @cindex sunrise and sunset
535
536 Special calendar commands can tell you, to within a minute or two, the
537 times of sunrise and sunset for any date.
538
539 @table @kbd
540 @item S
541 Display times of sunrise and sunset for the selected date
542 (@code{calendar-sunrise-sunset}).
543 @item Mouse-2 Sunrise/sunset
544 Display times of sunrise and sunset for the date you click on.
545 @item M-x sunrise-sunset
546 Display times of sunrise and sunset for today's date.
547 @item C-u M-x sunrise-sunset
548 Display times of sunrise and sunset for a specified date.
549 @end table
550
551 @kindex S @r{(Calendar mode)}
552 @findex calendar-sunrise-sunset
553 @findex sunrise-sunset
554 Within the calendar, to display the @emph{local times} of sunrise and
555 sunset in the echo area, move point to the date you want, and type
556 @kbd{S}. Alternatively, click @kbd{Mouse-2} on the date, then choose
557 @samp{Sunrise/sunset} from the menu that appears. The command @kbd{M-x
558 sunrise-sunset} is available outside the calendar to display this
559 information for today's date or a specified date. To specify a date
560 other than today, use @kbd{C-u M-x sunrise-sunset}, which prompts for
561 the year, month, and day.
562
563 You can display the times of sunrise and sunset for any location and
564 any date with @kbd{C-u C-u M-x sunrise-sunset}. This asks you for a
565 longitude, latitude, number of minutes difference from Coordinated
566 Universal Time, and date, and then tells you the times of sunrise and
567 sunset for that location on that date.
568
569 Because the times of sunrise and sunset depend on the location on
570 earth, you need to tell Emacs your latitude, longitude, and location
571 name before using these commands. Here is an example of what to set:
572
573 @vindex calendar-location-name
574 @vindex calendar-longitude
575 @vindex calendar-latitude
576 @example
577 (setq calendar-latitude 40.1)
578 (setq calendar-longitude -88.2)
579 (setq calendar-location-name "Urbana, IL")
580 @end example
581
582 @noindent
583 Use one decimal place in the values of @code{calendar-latitude} and
584 @code{calendar-longitude}.
585
586 Your time zone also affects the local time of sunrise and sunset.
587 Emacs usually gets time zone information from the operating system, but
588 if these values are not what you want (or if the operating system does
589 not supply them), you must set them yourself. Here is an example:
590
591 @vindex calendar-time-zone
592 @vindex calendar-standard-time-zone-name
593 @vindex calendar-daylight-time-zone-name
594 @example
595 (setq calendar-time-zone -360)
596 (setq calendar-standard-time-zone-name "CST")
597 (setq calendar-daylight-time-zone-name "CDT")
598 @end example
599
600 @noindent
601 The value of @code{calendar-time-zone} is the number of minutes
602 difference between your local standard time and Coordinated Universal
603 Time (Greenwich time). The values of
604 @code{calendar-standard-time-zone-name} and
605 @code{calendar-daylight-time-zone-name} are the abbreviations used in
606 your time zone. Emacs displays the times of sunrise and sunset
607 @emph{corrected for daylight savings time}. @xref{Daylight Savings},
608 for how daylight savings time is determined.
609
610 As a user, you might find it convenient to set the calendar location
611 variables for your usual physical location in your @file{.emacs} file.
612 And when you install Emacs on a machine, you can create a
613 @file{default.el} file which sets them properly for the typical location
614 of most users of that machine. @xref{Init File}.
615
616 @node Lunar Phases
617 @section Phases of the Moon
618 @cindex phases of the moon
619 @cindex moon, phases of
620
621 These calendar commands display the dates and times of the phases of
622 the moon (new moon, first quarter, full moon, last quarter). This
623 feature is useful for debugging problems that ``depend on the phase of
624 the moon.''
625
626 @table @kbd
627 @item M
628 Display the dates and times for all the quarters of the moon for the
629 three-month period shown (@code{calendar-phases-of-moon}).
630 @item M-x phases-of-moon
631 Display dates and times of the quarters of the moon for three months around
632 today's date.
633 @end table
634
635 @kindex M @r{(Calendar mode)}
636 @findex calendar-phases-of-moon
637 Within the calendar, use the @kbd{M} command to display a separate
638 buffer of the phases of the moon for the current three-month range. The
639 dates and times listed are accurate to within a few minutes.
640
641 @findex phases-of-moon
642 Outside the calendar, use the command @kbd{M-x phases-of-moon} to
643 display the list of the phases of the moon for the current month and the
644 preceding and succeeding months. For information about a different
645 month, use @kbd{C-u M-x phases-of-moon}, which prompts for the month and
646 year.
647
648 The dates and times given for the phases of the moon are given in
649 local time (corrected for daylight savings, when appropriate); but if
650 the variable @code{calendar-time-zone} is void, Coordinated Universal
651 Time (the Greenwich time zone) is used. @xref{Daylight Savings}.
652
653 @node Other Calendars
654 @section Conversion To and From Other Calendars
655
656 @cindex Gregorian calendar
657 The Emacs calendar displayed is @emph{always} the Gregorian calendar,
658 sometimes called the ``new style'' calendar, which is used in most of
659 the world today. However, this calendar did not exist before the
660 sixteenth century and was not widely used before the eighteenth century;
661 it did not fully displace the Julian calendar and gain universal
662 acceptance until the early twentieth century. The Emacs calendar can
663 display any month since January, year 1 of the current era, but the
664 calendar displayed is the Gregorian, even for a date at which the
665 Gregorian calendar did not exist.
666
667 While Emacs cannot display other calendars, it can convert dates to
668 and from several other calendars.
669
670 @menu
671 * Calendar Systems:: The calendars Emacs understands
672 (aside from Gregorian).
673 * To Other Calendar:: Converting the selected date to various calendars.
674 * From Other Calendar:: Moving to a date specified in another calendar.
675 * Mayan Calendar:: Moving to a date specified in a Mayan calendar.
676 @end menu
677
678 @node Calendar Systems
679 @subsection Supported Calendar Systems
680
681 @cindex ISO commercial calendar
682 The ISO commercial calendar is used largely in Europe.
683
684 @cindex Julian calendar
685 The Julian calendar, named after Julius Caesar, was the one used in Europe
686 throughout medieval times, and in many countries up until the nineteenth
687 century.
688
689 @cindex Julian day numbers
690 @cindex astronomical day numbers
691 Astronomers use a simple counting of days elapsed since noon, Monday,
692 January 1, 4713 B.C. on the Julian calendar. The number of days elapsed
693 is called the @dfn{Julian day number} or the @dfn{Astronomical day number}.
694
695 @cindex Hebrew calendar
696 The Hebrew calendar is used by tradition in the Jewish religion. The
697 Emacs calendar program uses the Hebrew calendar to determine the dates
698 of Jewish holidays. Hebrew calendar dates begin and end at sunset.
699
700 @cindex Islamic calendar
701 The Islamic calendar is used in many predominantly Islamic countries.
702 Emacs uses it to determine the dates of Islamic holidays. There is no
703 universal agreement in the Islamic world about the calendar; Emacs uses
704 a widely accepted version, but the precise dates of Islamic holidays
705 often depend on proclamation by religious authorities, not on
706 calculations. As a consequence, the actual dates of observance can vary
707 slightly from the dates computed by Emacs. Islamic calendar dates begin
708 and end at sunset.
709
710 @cindex French Revolutionary calendar
711 The French Revolutionary calendar was created by the Jacobins after the 1789
712 revolution, to represent a more secular and nature-based view of the annual
713 cycle, and to install a 10-day week in a rationalization measure similar to
714 the metric system. The French government officially abandoned this
715 calendar at the end of 1805.
716
717 @cindex Mayan calendar
718 The Maya of Central America used three separate, overlapping calendar
719 systems, the @emph{long count}, the @emph{tzolkin}, and the @emph{haab}.
720 Emacs knows about all three of these calendars. Experts dispute the
721 exact correlation between the Mayan calendar and our calendar; Emacs uses the
722 Goodman-Martinez-Thompson correlation in its calculations.
723
724 @cindex Coptic calendar
725 @cindex Ethiopic calendar
726 The Copts use a calendar based on the ancient Egyptian solar calendar.
727 Their calendar consists of twelve 30-day months followed by an extra
728 five-day period. Once every fourth year they add a leap day to this
729 extra period to make it six days. The Ethiopic calendar is identical in
730 structure, but has different year numbers and month names.
731
732 @cindex Persian calendar
733 The Persians use a solar calendar based on a design of Omar Khayyam.
734 Their calendar consists of twelve months of which the first six have 31
735 days, the next five have 30 days, and the last has 29 in ordinary years
736 and 30 in leap years. Leap years occur in a complicated pattern every
737 four or five years.
738 The calendar implemented here is the arithmetical Persian calendar
739 championed by Birashk, based on a 2,820-year cycle. It differs from
740 the astronomical Persian calendar, which is based on astronomical
741 events. As of this writing the first future discrepancy is projected
742 to occur on March 20, 2025. It is currently not clear what the
743 official calendar of Iran will be that far into the future.
744
745 @cindex Chinese calendar
746 The Chinese calendar is a complicated system of lunar months arranged
747 into solar years. The years go in cycles of sixty, each year containing
748 either twelve months in an ordinary year or thirteen months in a leap
749 year; each month has either 29 or 30 days. Years, ordinary months, and
750 days are named by combining one of ten ``celestial stems'' with one of
751 twelve ``terrestrial branches'' for a total of sixty names that are
752 repeated in a cycle of sixty.
753
754 @node To Other Calendar
755 @subsection Converting To Other Calendars
756
757 The following commands describe the selected date (the date at point)
758 in various other calendar systems:
759
760 @table @kbd
761 @item Mouse-2 Other calendars
762 Display the date that you click on, expressed in various other calendars.
763 @kindex p @r{(Calendar mode)}
764 @findex calendar-print-iso-date
765 @item p c
766 Display ISO commercial calendar equivalent for selected day
767 (@code{calendar-print-iso-date}).
768 @findex calendar-print-julian-date
769 @item p j
770 Display Julian date for selected day (@code{calendar-print-julian-date}).
771 @findex calendar-print-astro-day-number
772 @item p a
773 Display astronomical (Julian) day number for selected day
774 (@code{calendar-print-astro-day-number}).
775 @findex calendar-print-hebrew-date
776 @item p h
777 Display Hebrew date for selected day (@code{calendar-print-hebrew-date}).
778 @findex calendar-print-islamic-date
779 @item p i
780 Display Islamic date for selected day (@code{calendar-print-islamic-date}).
781 @findex calendar-print-french-date
782 @item p f
783 Display French Revolutionary date for selected day
784 (@code{calendar-print-french-date}).
785 @findex calendar-print-chinese-date
786 @item p C
787 Display Chinese date for selected day
788 (@code{calendar-print-chinese-date}).
789 @findex calendar-print-coptic-date
790 @item p k
791 Display Coptic date for selected day
792 (@code{calendar-print-coptic-date}).
793 @findex calendar-print-ethiopic-date
794 @item p e
795 Display Ethiopic date for selected day
796 (@code{calendar-print-ethiopic-date}).
797 @findex calendar-print-persian-date
798 @item p p
799 Display Persian date for selected day
800 (@code{calendar-print-persian-date}).
801 @findex calendar-print-mayan-date
802 @item p m
803 Display Mayan date for selected day (@code{calendar-print-mayan-date}).
804 @end table
805
806 If you are using X, the easiest way to translate a date into other
807 calendars is to click on it with @kbd{Mouse-2}, then choose @kbd{Other
808 calendars} from the menu that appears. This displays the equivalent
809 forms of the date in all the calendars Emacs understands, in the form of
810 a menu. (Choosing an alternative from this menu doesn't actually do
811 anything---the menu is used only for display.)
812
813 Otherwise, move point to the date you want to convert, then type the
814 appropriate command starting with @kbd{p} from the table above. The
815 prefix @kbd{p} is a mnemonic for ``print,'' since Emacs ``prints'' the
816 equivalent date in the echo area.
817
818 @node From Other Calendar
819 @subsection Converting From Other Calendars
820
821 You can use the other supported calendars to specify a date to move
822 to. This section describes the commands for doing this using calendars
823 other than Mayan; for the Mayan calendar, see the following section.
824
825 @kindex g @var{char} @r{(Calendar mode)}
826 @findex calendar-goto-iso-date
827 @findex calendar-goto-iso-week
828 @findex calendar-goto-julian-date
829 @findex calendar-goto-astro-day-number
830 @findex calendar-goto-hebrew-date
831 @findex calendar-goto-islamic-date
832 @findex calendar-goto-french-date
833 @findex calendar-goto-chinese-date
834 @findex calendar-goto-persian-date
835 @findex calendar-goto-coptic-date
836 @findex calendar-goto-ethiopic-date
837 @table @kbd
838 @item g c
839 Move to a date specified in the ISO commercial calendar
840 (@code{calendar-goto-iso-date}).
841 @item g w
842 Move to a week specified in the ISO commercial calendar
843 (@code{calendar-goto-iso-week}).
844 @item g j
845 Move to a date specified in the Julian calendar
846 (@code{calendar-goto-julian-date}).
847 @item g a
848 Move to a date specified with an astronomical (Julian) day number
849 (@code{calendar-goto-astro-day-number}).
850 @item g h
851 Move to a date specified in the Hebrew calendar
852 (@code{calendar-goto-hebrew-date}).
853 @item g i
854 Move to a date specified in the Islamic calendar
855 (@code{calendar-goto-islamic-date}).
856 @item g f
857 Move to a date specified in the French Revolutionary calendar
858 (@code{calendar-goto-french-date}).
859 @item g C
860 Move to a date specified in the Chinese calendar
861 (@code{calendar-goto-chinese-date}).
862 @item g p
863 Move to a date specified in the Persian calendar
864 (@code{calendar-goto-persian-date}).
865 @item g k
866 Move to a date specified in the Coptic calendar
867 (@code{calendar-goto-coptic-date}).
868 @item g e
869 Move to a date specified in the Ethiopic calendar
870 (@code{calendar-goto-ethiopic-date}).
871 @end table
872
873 These commands ask you for a date on the other calendar, move point to
874 the Gregorian calendar date equivalent to that date, and display the
875 other calendar's date in the echo area. Emacs uses strict completion
876 (@pxref{Completion}) whenever it asks you to type a month name, so you
877 don't have to worry about the spelling of Hebrew, Islamic, or French names.
878
879 @findex list-yahrzeit-dates
880 @cindex yahrzeits
881 One common question concerning the Hebrew calendar is the computation
882 of the anniversary of a date of death, called a ``yahrzeit.'' The Emacs
883 calendar includes a facility for such calculations. If you are in the
884 calendar, the command @kbd{M-x list-yahrzeit-dates} asks you for a
885 range of years and then displays a list of the yahrzeit dates for those
886 years for the date given by point. If you are not in the calendar,
887 this command first asks you for the date of death and the range of
888 years, and then displays the list of yahrzeit dates.
889
890 @node Mayan Calendar
891 @subsection Converting from the Mayan Calendar
892
893 Here are the commands to select dates based on the Mayan calendar:
894
895 @table @kbd
896 @item g m l
897 Move to a date specified by the long count calendar
898 (@code{calendar-goto-mayan-long-count-date}).
899 @item g m n t
900 Move to the next occurrence of a place in the
901 tzolkin calendar (@code{calendar-next-tzolkin-date}).
902 @item g m p t
903 Move to the previous occurrence of a place in the
904 tzolkin calendar (@code{calendar-previous-tzolkin-date}).
905 @item g m n h
906 Move to the next occurrence of a place in the
907 haab calendar (@code{calendar-next-haab-date}).
908 @item g m p h
909 Move to the previous occurrence of a place in the
910 haab calendar (@code{calendar-previous-haab-date}).
911 @item g m n c
912 Move to the next occurrence of a place in the
913 calendar round (@code{calendar-next-calendar-round-date}).
914 @item g m p c
915 Move to the previous occurrence of a place in the
916 calendar round (@code{calendar-previous-calendar-round-date}).
917 @end table
918
919 @cindex Mayan long count
920 To understand these commands, you need to understand the Mayan calendars.
921 The @dfn{long count} is a counting of days with these units:
922
923 @display
924 1 kin = 1 day@ @ @ 1 uinal = 20 kin@ @ @ 1 tun = 18 uinal
925 1 katun = 20 tun@ @ @ 1 baktun = 20 katun
926 @end display
927
928 @kindex g m @r{(Calendar mode)}
929 @findex calendar-goto-mayan-long-count-date
930 @noindent
931 Thus, the long count date 12.16.11.16.6 means 12 baktun, 16 katun, 11
932 tun, 16 uinal, and 6 kin. The Emacs calendar can handle Mayan long
933 count dates as early as 7.17.18.13.3, but no earlier. When you use the
934 @kbd{g m l} command, type the Mayan long count date with the baktun,
935 katun, tun, uinal, and kin separated by periods.
936
937 @findex calendar-previous-tzolkin-date
938 @findex calendar-next-tzolkin-date
939 @cindex Mayan tzolkin calendar
940 The Mayan tzolkin calendar is a cycle of 260 days formed by a pair of
941 independent cycles of 13 and 20 days. Since this cycle repeats
942 endlessly, Emacs provides commands to move backward and forward to the
943 previous or next point in the cycle. Type @kbd{g m p t} to go to the
944 previous tzolkin date; Emacs asks you for a tzolkin date and moves point
945 to the previous occurrence of that date. Similarly, type @kbd{g m n t}
946 to go to the next occurrence of a tzolkin date.
947
948 @findex calendar-previous-haab-date
949 @findex calendar-next-haab-date
950 @cindex Mayan haab calendar
951 The Mayan haab calendar is a cycle of 365 days arranged as 18 months
952 of 20 days each, followed a 5-day monthless period. Like the tzolkin
953 cycle, this cycle repeats endlessly, and there are commands to move
954 backward and forward to the previous or next point in the cycle. Type
955 @kbd{g m p h} to go to the previous haab date; Emacs asks you for a haab
956 date and moves point to the previous occurrence of that date.
957 Similarly, type @kbd{g m n h} to go to the next occurrence of a haab
958 date.
959
960 @c This is omitted because it is too long for smallbook format.
961 @c @findex calendar-previous-calendar-round-date
962 @findex calendar-next-calendar-round-date
963 @cindex Mayan calendar round
964 The Maya also used the combination of the tzolkin date and the haab
965 date. This combination is a cycle of about 52 years called a
966 @emph{calendar round}. If you type @kbd{g m p c}, Emacs asks you for
967 both a haab and a tzolkin date and then moves point to the previous
968 occurrence of that combination. Use @kbd{g m n c} to move point to the
969 next occurrence of a combination. These commands signal an error if the
970 haab/tzolkin date combination you have typed is impossible.
971
972 Emacs uses strict completion (@pxref{Strict Completion}) whenever it
973 asks you to type a Mayan name, so you don't have to worry about
974 spelling.
975
976 @node Diary
977 @section The Diary
978 @cindex diary
979
980 The Emacs diary keeps track of appointments or other events on a daily
981 basis, in conjunction with the calendar. To use the diary feature, you
982 must first create a @dfn{diary file} containing a list of events and
983 their dates. Then Emacs can automatically pick out and display the
984 events for today, for the immediate future, or for any specified
985 date.
986
987 The name of the diary file is specified by the variable
988 @code{diary-file}; @file{~/diary} is the default. A sample diary file
989 is (note that the file format is essentially the same as that used by
990 the external shell utility @samp{calendar}):
991
992 @example
993 12/22/1988 Twentieth wedding anniversary!!
994 &1/1. Happy New Year!
995 10/22 Ruth's birthday.
996 * 21, *: Payday
997 Tuesday--weekly meeting with grad students at 10am
998 Supowit, Shen, Bitner, and Kapoor to attend.
999 1/13/89 Friday the thirteenth!!
1000 &thu 4pm squash game with Lloyd.
1001 mar 16 Dad's birthday
1002 April 15, 1989 Income tax due.
1003 &* 15 time cards due.
1004 @end example
1005
1006 @noindent
1007 This example uses extra spaces to align the event descriptions of most
1008 of the entries. Such formatting is purely a matter of taste.
1009
1010 Although you probably will start by creating a diary manually, Emacs
1011 provides a number of commands to let you view, add, and change diary
1012 entries.
1013
1014 @menu
1015 * Displaying the Diary:: Viewing diary entries and associated calendar dates.
1016 * Format of Diary File:: Entering events in your diary.
1017 * Date Formats:: Various ways you can specify dates.
1018 * Adding to Diary:: Commands to create diary entries.
1019 * Special Diary Entries:: Anniversaries, blocks of dates, cyclic entries, etc.
1020 @end menu
1021
1022 @node Displaying the Diary
1023 @subsection Displaying the Diary
1024
1025 Once you have created a diary file, you can use the calendar to view
1026 it. You can also view today's events outside of Calendar mode.
1027
1028 @table @kbd
1029 @item d
1030 Display all diary entries for the selected date
1031 (@code{diary-view-entries}).
1032 @item Mouse-2 Diary
1033 Display all diary entries for the date you click on.
1034 @item s
1035 Display the entire diary file (@code{diary-show-all-entries}).
1036 @item m
1037 Mark all visible dates that have diary entries
1038 (@code{mark-diary-entries}).
1039 @item u
1040 Unmark the calendar window (@code{calendar-unmark}).
1041 @item M-x print-diary-entries
1042 Print hard copy of the diary display as it appears.
1043 @item M-x diary
1044 Display all diary entries for today's date.
1045 @item M-x diary-mail-entries
1046 Mail yourself email reminders about upcoming diary entries.
1047 @end table
1048
1049 @kindex d @r{(Calendar mode)}
1050 @findex diary-view-entries
1051 @vindex view-diary-entries-initially
1052 Displaying the diary entries with @kbd{d} shows in a separate window
1053 the diary entries for the selected date in the calendar. The mode line
1054 of the new window shows the date of the diary entries and any holidays
1055 that fall on that date. If you specify a numeric argument with @kbd{d},
1056 it shows all the diary entries for that many successive days. Thus,
1057 @kbd{2 d} displays all the entries for the selected date and for the
1058 following day.
1059
1060 Another way to display the diary entries for a date is to click
1061 @kbd{Mouse-2} on the date, and then choose @kbd{Diary entries} from
1062 the menu that appears. If the variable
1063 @code{view-diary-entries-initially} is non-@code{nil}, creating the
1064 calendar lists the diary entries for the current date (provided the
1065 current date is visible).
1066
1067 @kindex m @r{(Calendar mode)}
1068 @findex mark-diary-entries
1069 @vindex mark-diary-entries-in-calendar
1070 To get a broader view of which days are mentioned in the diary, use
1071 the @kbd{m} command. This displays the dates that have diary entries in
1072 a different face (or places a @samp{+} after these dates, if display
1073 with multiple faces is not available).
1074 @iftex
1075 @inforef{Calendar Customizing, diary-entry-marker, emacs-xtra}.
1076 @end iftex
1077 @ifnottex
1078 @xref{Calendar Customizing, diary-entry-marker}.
1079 @end ifnottex
1080 The command applies both to the currently visible months and to
1081 other months that subsequently become visible by scrolling. To turn
1082 marking off and erase the current marks, type @kbd{u}, which also
1083 turns off holiday marks (@pxref{Holidays}). If the variable
1084 @code{mark-diary-entries-in-calendar} is non-@code{nil}, creating or
1085 updating the calendar marks diary dates automatically.
1086
1087 @kindex s @r{(Calendar mode)}
1088 @findex diary-show-all-entries
1089 To see the full diary file, rather than just some of the entries, use
1090 the @kbd{s} command.
1091
1092 Display of selected diary entries uses the selective display feature
1093 to hide entries that don't apply. The diary buffer as you see it is
1094 an illusion, so simply printing the buffer does not print what you see
1095 on your screen. There is a special command to print hard copy of the
1096 diary buffer @emph{as it appears}; this command is @kbd{M-x
1097 print-diary-entries}. It sends the data directly to the printer. You
1098 can customize it like @code{lpr-region} (@pxref{Printing}).
1099
1100 @findex diary
1101 The command @kbd{M-x diary} displays the diary entries for the current
1102 date, independently of the calendar display, and optionally for the next
1103 few days as well; the variable @code{number-of-diary-entries} specifies
1104 how many days to include.
1105 @iftex
1106 @inforef{Diary Customizing,, emacs-xtra}.
1107 @end iftex
1108 @ifnottex
1109 @xref{Diary Customizing, number-of-diary-entries}.
1110 @end ifnottex
1111
1112 If you put @code{(diary)} in your @file{.emacs} file, this
1113 automatically displays a window with the day's diary entries, when you
1114 enter Emacs. The mode line of the displayed window shows the date and
1115 any holidays that fall on that date.
1116
1117 @findex diary-mail-entries
1118 @vindex diary-mail-days
1119 Many users like to receive notice of events in their diary as email.
1120 To send such mail to yourself, use the command @kbd{M-x
1121 diary-mail-entries}. A prefix argument specifies how many days
1122 (starting with today) to check; otherwise, the variable
1123 @code{diary-mail-days} says how many days.
1124
1125 @node Format of Diary File
1126 @subsection The Diary File
1127 @cindex diary file
1128
1129 @vindex diary-file
1130 Your @dfn{diary file} is a file that records events associated with
1131 particular dates. The name of the diary file is specified by the
1132 variable @code{diary-file}; @file{~/diary} is the default. The
1133 @code{calendar} utility program supports a subset of the format allowed
1134 by the Emacs diary facilities, so you can use that utility to view the
1135 diary file, with reasonable results aside from the entries it cannot
1136 understand.
1137
1138 Each entry in the diary file describes one event and consists of one
1139 or more lines. An entry always begins with a date specification at the
1140 left margin. The rest of the entry is simply text to describe the
1141 event. If the entry has more than one line, then the lines after the
1142 first must begin with whitespace to indicate they continue a previous
1143 entry. Lines that do not begin with valid dates and do not continue a
1144 preceding entry are ignored.
1145
1146 You can inhibit the marking of certain diary entries in the calendar
1147 window; to do this, insert an ampersand (@samp{&}) at the beginning of
1148 the entry, before the date. This has no effect on display of the entry
1149 in the diary window; it affects only marks on dates in the calendar
1150 window. Nonmarking entries are especially useful for generic entries
1151 that would otherwise mark many different dates.
1152
1153 If the first line of a diary entry consists only of the date or day
1154 name with no following blanks or punctuation, then the diary window
1155 display doesn't include that line; only the continuation lines appear.
1156 For example, this entry:
1157
1158 @example
1159 02/11/1989
1160 Bill B. visits Princeton today
1161 2pm Cognitive Studies Committee meeting
1162 2:30-5:30 Liz at Lawrenceville
1163 4:00pm Dentist appt
1164 7:30pm Dinner at George's
1165 8:00-10:00pm concert
1166 @end example
1167
1168 @noindent
1169 appears in the diary window without the date line at the beginning.
1170 This style of entry looks neater when you display just a single day's
1171 entries, but can cause confusion if you ask for more than one day's
1172 entries.
1173
1174 You can edit the diary entries as they appear in the window, but it is
1175 important to remember that the buffer displayed contains the @emph{entire}
1176 diary file, with portions of it concealed from view. This means, for
1177 instance, that the @kbd{C-f} (@code{forward-char}) command can put point
1178 at what appears to be the end of the line, but what is in reality the
1179 middle of some concealed line.
1180
1181 @emph{Be careful when editing the diary entries!} Inserting
1182 additional lines or adding/deleting characters in the middle of a
1183 visible line cannot cause problems, but editing at the end of a line may
1184 not do what you expect. Deleting a line may delete other invisible
1185 entries that follow it. Before editing the diary, it is best to display
1186 the entire file with @kbd{s} (@code{diary-show-all-entries}).
1187
1188 @node Date Formats
1189 @subsection Date Formats
1190
1191 Here are some sample diary entries, illustrating different ways of
1192 formatting a date. The examples all show dates in American order
1193 (month, day, year), but Calendar mode supports European order (day,
1194 month, year) as an option.
1195
1196 @example
1197 4/20/93 Switch-over to new tabulation system
1198 apr. 25 Start tabulating annual results
1199 4/30 Results for April are due
1200 */25 Monthly cycle finishes
1201 Friday Don't leave without backing up files
1202 @end example
1203
1204 The first entry appears only once, on April 20, 1993. The second and
1205 third appear every year on the specified dates, and the fourth uses a
1206 wildcard (asterisk) for the month, so it appears on the 25th of every
1207 month. The final entry appears every week on Friday.
1208
1209 You can use just numbers to express a date, as in
1210 @samp{@var{month}/@var{day}} or @samp{@var{month}/@var{day}/@var{year}}.
1211 This must be followed by a nondigit. In the date itself, @var{month}
1212 and @var{day} are numbers of one or two digits. The optional @var{year}
1213 is also a number, and may be abbreviated to the last two digits; that
1214 is, you can use @samp{11/12/1989} or @samp{11/12/89}.
1215
1216 Dates can also have the form @samp{@var{monthname} @var{day}} or
1217 @samp{@var{monthname} @var{day}, @var{year}}, where the month's name can
1218 be spelled in full or abbreviated (with or without a period). The
1219 preferred abbreviations can be controlled using the variables
1220 @code{calendar-abbrev-length}, @code{calendar-month-abbrev-array}, and
1221 @code{calendar-day-abbrev-array}. The default is to use the first three
1222 letters of a name as its abbreviation. Case is not significant.
1223
1224 A date may be @dfn{generic}; that is, partially unspecified. Then the
1225 entry applies to all dates that match the specification. If the date
1226 does not contain a year, it is generic and applies to any year.
1227 Alternatively, @var{month}, @var{day}, or @var{year} can be a @samp{*};
1228 this matches any month, day, or year, respectively. Thus, a diary entry
1229 @samp{3/*/*} matches any day in March of any year; so does @samp{march
1230 *}.
1231
1232 @vindex european-calendar-style
1233 @findex european-calendar
1234 @findex american-calendar
1235 If you prefer the European style of writing dates---in which the day
1236 comes before the month---type @kbd{M-x european-calendar} while in the
1237 calendar, or set the variable @code{european-calendar-style} to @code{t}
1238 with @kbd{M-x customize}, or @emph{before} using any calendar or diary
1239 command. This mode interprets all dates in the diary in the European
1240 manner, and also uses European style for displaying diary dates. (Note
1241 that there is no comma after the @var{monthname} in the European style.)
1242 To go back to the (default) American style of writing dates, type
1243 @kbd{M-x american-calendar}.
1244
1245 You can use the name of a day of the week as a generic date which
1246 applies to any date falling on that day of the week. You can abbreviate
1247 the day of the week to three letters (with or without a period) or spell
1248 it in full; case is not significant.
1249
1250 @node Adding to Diary
1251 @subsection Commands to Add to the Diary
1252
1253 While in the calendar, there are several commands to create diary
1254 entries:
1255
1256 @table @kbd
1257 @item i d
1258 Add a diary entry for the selected date (@code{insert-diary-entry}).
1259 @item i w
1260 Add a diary entry for the selected day of the week (@code{insert-weekly-diary-entry}).
1261 @item i m
1262 Add a diary entry for the selected day of the month (@code{insert-monthly-diary-entry}).
1263 @item i y
1264 Add a diary entry for the selected day of the year (@code{insert-yearly-diary-entry}).
1265 @end table
1266
1267 @kindex i d @r{(Calendar mode)}
1268 @findex insert-diary-entry
1269 You can make a diary entry for a specific date by selecting that date
1270 in the calendar window and typing the @kbd{i d} command. This command
1271 displays the end of your diary file in another window and inserts the
1272 date; you can then type the rest of the diary entry.
1273
1274 @kindex i w @r{(Calendar mode)}
1275 @findex insert-weekly-diary-entry
1276 @kindex i m @r{(Calendar mode)}
1277 @findex insert-monthly-diary-entry
1278 @kindex i y @r{(Calendar mode)}
1279 @findex insert-yearly-diary-entry
1280 If you want to make a diary entry that applies to a specific day of
1281 the week, select that day of the week (any occurrence will do) and type
1282 @kbd{i w}. This inserts the day-of-week as a generic date; you can then
1283 type the rest of the diary entry. You can make a monthly diary entry in
1284 the same fashion: select the day of the month, use the @kbd{i m}
1285 command, and type the rest of the entry. Similarly, you can insert a
1286 yearly diary entry with the @kbd{i y} command.
1287
1288 All of the above commands make marking diary entries by default. To
1289 make a nonmarking diary entry, give a numeric argument to the command.
1290 For example, @kbd{C-u i w} makes a nonmarking weekly diary entry.
1291
1292 When you modify the diary file, be sure to save the file before
1293 exiting Emacs. Saving the diary file after using any of the above
1294 insertion commands will automatically update the diary marks in the
1295 calendar window, if appropriate. You can use the command
1296 @code{redraw-calendar} to force an update at any time.
1297
1298 @node Special Diary Entries
1299 @subsection Special Diary Entries
1300
1301 In addition to entries based on calendar dates, the diary file can
1302 contain @dfn{sexp entries} for regular events such as anniversaries.
1303 These entries are based on Lisp expressions (sexps) that Emacs evaluates
1304 as it scans the diary file. Instead of a date, a sexp entry contains
1305 @samp{%%} followed by a Lisp expression which must begin and end with
1306 parentheses. The Lisp expression determines which dates the entry
1307 applies to.
1308
1309 Calendar mode provides commands to insert certain commonly used
1310 sexp entries:
1311
1312 @table @kbd
1313 @item i a
1314 Add an anniversary diary entry for the selected date
1315 (@code{insert-anniversary-diary-entry}).
1316 @item i b
1317 Add a block diary entry for the current region
1318 (@code{insert-block-diary-entry}).
1319 @item i c
1320 Add a cyclic diary entry starting at the date
1321 (@code{insert-cyclic-diary-entry}).
1322 @end table
1323
1324 @kindex i a @r{(Calendar mode)}
1325 @findex insert-anniversary-diary-entry
1326 If you want to make a diary entry that applies to the anniversary of a
1327 specific date, move point to that date and use the @kbd{i a} command.
1328 This displays the end of your diary file in another window and inserts
1329 the anniversary description; you can then type the rest of the diary
1330 entry. The entry looks like this:
1331
1332 @findex diary-anniversary
1333 @example
1334 %%(diary-anniversary 10 31 1948) Arthur's birthday
1335 @end example
1336
1337 @noindent
1338 This entry applies to October 31 in any year after 1948; @samp{10 31
1339 1948} specifies the date. (If you are using the European calendar
1340 style, the month and day are interchanged.) The reason this expression
1341 requires a beginning year is that advanced diary functions can use it to
1342 calculate the number of elapsed years.
1343
1344 A @dfn{block} diary entry applies to a specified range of consecutive
1345 dates. Here is a block diary entry that applies to all dates from June
1346 24, 1990 through July 10, 1990:
1347
1348 @findex diary-block
1349 @example
1350 %%(diary-block 6 24 1990 7 10 1990) Vacation
1351 @end example
1352
1353 @noindent
1354 The @samp{6 24 1990} indicates the starting date and the @samp{7 10 1990}
1355 indicates the stopping date. (Again, if you are using the European calendar
1356 style, the month and day are interchanged.)
1357
1358 @kindex i b @r{(Calendar mode)}
1359 @findex insert-block-diary-entry
1360 To insert a block entry, place point and the mark on the two
1361 dates that begin and end the range, and type @kbd{i b}. This command
1362 displays the end of your diary file in another window and inserts the
1363 block description; you can then type the diary entry.
1364
1365 @kindex i c @r{(Calendar mode)}
1366 @findex insert-cyclic-diary-entry
1367 @dfn{Cyclic} diary entries repeat after a fixed interval of days. To
1368 create one, select the starting date and use the @kbd{i c} command. The
1369 command prompts for the length of interval, then inserts the entry,
1370 which looks like this:
1371
1372 @findex diary-cyclic
1373 @example
1374 %%(diary-cyclic 50 3 1 1990) Renew medication
1375 @end example
1376
1377 @noindent
1378 This entry applies to March 1, 1990 and every 50th day following;
1379 @samp{3 1 1990} specifies the starting date. (If you are using the
1380 European calendar style, the month and day are interchanged.)
1381
1382 All three of these commands make marking diary entries. To insert a
1383 nonmarking entry, give a numeric argument to the command. For example,
1384 @kbd{C-u i a} makes a nonmarking anniversary diary entry.
1385
1386 Marking sexp diary entries in the calendar is @emph{extremely}
1387 time-consuming, since every date visible in the calendar window must be
1388 individually checked. So it's a good idea to make sexp diary entries
1389 nonmarking (with @samp{&}) when possible.
1390
1391 Another sophisticated kind of sexp entry, a @dfn{floating} diary entry,
1392 specifies a regularly occurring event by offsets specified in days,
1393 weeks, and months. It is comparable to a crontab entry interpreted by
1394 the @code{cron} utility. Here is a nonmarking, floating diary entry
1395 that applies to the last Thursday in November:
1396
1397 @findex diary-float
1398 @example
1399 &%%(diary-float 11 4 -1) American Thanksgiving
1400 @end example
1401
1402 @noindent
1403 The 11 specifies November (the eleventh month), the 4 specifies Thursday
1404 (the fourth day of the week, where Sunday is numbered zero), and the
1405 @minus{}1 specifies ``last'' (1 would mean ``first,'' 2 would mean
1406 ``second,'' @minus{}2 would mean ``second-to-last,'' and so on). The
1407 month can be a single month or a list of months. Thus you could change
1408 the 11 above to @samp{'(1 2 3)} and have the entry apply to the last
1409 Thursday of January, February, and March. If the month is @code{t}, the
1410 entry applies to all months of the year.@refill
1411
1412 Each of the standard sexp diary entries takes an optional parameter
1413 specifying the name of a face or a single-character string to use when
1414 marking the entry in the calendar. Most generally, sexp diary entries
1415 can perform arbitrary computations to determine when they apply.
1416 @iftex
1417 @inforef{Sexp Diary Entries,, emacs-xtra}.
1418 @end iftex
1419 @ifnottex
1420 @inforef{Sexp Diary Entries}.
1421 @end ifnottex
1422
1423 @node Appointments
1424 @section Appointments
1425 @cindex appointment notification
1426
1427 @vindex appt-display-format
1428 @vindex appt-audible
1429 @vindex appt-display-mode-line
1430 If you have a diary entry for an appointment, and that diary entry
1431 begins with a recognizable time of day, Emacs can warn you several
1432 minutes beforehand that that appointment is pending. Emacs alerts you
1433 to the appointment by displaying a message in your chosen format, as
1434 specified by the variable @code{appt-display-format}. If the value of
1435 @code{appt-audible} is non-@code{nil}, the warning includes an audible
1436 reminder. In addition, if @code{appt-display-mode-line} is
1437 non-@code{nil}, Emacs displays the number of minutes to the
1438 appointment on the mode line.
1439
1440 @vindex appt-display-duration
1441 @vindex appt-disp-window-function
1442 @vindex appt-delete-window-function
1443 If @code{appt-display-format} has the value @code{window}, then the
1444 variable @code{appt-display-duration} controls how long the reminder
1445 window is visible for; and the variables
1446 @code{appt-disp-window-function} and @code{appt-delete-window-function}
1447 give the names of functions used to create and destroy the window,
1448 respectively.
1449
1450 @findex appt-activate
1451 To enable appointment notification, use the command @kbd{M-x
1452 appt-activate}. With a positive argument, it enables notification;
1453 with a negative argument, it disables notification; with no argument,
1454 it toggles. Enabling notification also sets up an appointment list
1455 for today from the diary file, giving all diary entries found with
1456 recognizable times of day, and reminds you just before each of them.
1457
1458 For example, suppose the diary file contains these lines:
1459
1460 @example
1461 Monday
1462 9:30am Coffee break
1463 12:00pm Lunch
1464 @end example
1465
1466 @vindex appt-message-warning-time
1467 @noindent
1468 Then on Mondays, you will be reminded at around 9:20am about your
1469 coffee break and at around 11:50am about lunch. The variable
1470 @code{appt-message-warning-time} specifies how many minutes in advance
1471 to warn you; its default value is 12 (12 minutes).
1472
1473 You can write times in am/pm style (with @samp{12:00am} standing
1474 for midnight and @samp{12:00pm} standing for noon), or 24-hour
1475 European/military style. You need not be consistent; your diary file
1476 can have a mixture of the two styles. Times must be at the beginning
1477 of lines if they are to be recognized.
1478
1479 @vindex appt-display-diary
1480 Emacs updates the appointments list from the diary file
1481 automatically just after midnight. You can force an update at any
1482 time by re-enabling appointment notification. Both these actions also
1483 display the day's diary buffer, unless you set
1484 @code{appt-display-diary} to @code{nil}. The appointments list is
1485 also updated whenever the diary file is saved.
1486
1487 @findex appt-add
1488 @findex appt-delete
1489 @cindex alarm clock
1490 You can also use the appointment notification facility like an alarm
1491 clock. The command @kbd{M-x appt-add} adds entries to the appointment
1492 list without affecting your diary file. You delete entries from the
1493 appointment list with @kbd{M-x appt-delete}.
1494
1495 @node Importing Diary
1496 @section Importing and Exporting Diary Entries
1497
1498 You can transfer diary entries between Emacs diary files and a
1499 variety of other formats.
1500
1501 @vindex diary-outlook-formats
1502 You can import diary entries from Outlook-generated appointment
1503 messages. While viewing such a message in Rmail or Gnus, do @kbd{M-x
1504 diary-from-outlook} to import the entry. You can make this command
1505 recognize additional appointment message formats by customizing the
1506 variable @code{diary-outlook-formats}.
1507
1508 @cindex iCalendar support
1509 The icalendar package allows you to transfer data between your Emacs
1510 diary file and iCalendar files, which are defined in ``RFC
1511 2445---Internet Calendaring and Scheduling Core Object Specification
1512 (iCalendar)'' (as well as the earlier vCalendar format).
1513
1514 Importing works for ``ordinary'' (i.e. non-recurring) events, but
1515 (at present) may not work correctly (if at all) for recurring events.
1516 Exporting of diary files into iCalendar files should work correctly
1517 for most diary entries. This feature is a work in progress, so the
1518 commands may evolve in future.
1519
1520 @findex icalendar-import-buffer
1521 The command @code{icalendar-import-buffer} extracts
1522 iCalendar data from the current buffer and adds it to your (default)
1523 diary file. This function is also suitable for automatic extraction of
1524 iCalendar data; for example with the Rmail mail client one could use:
1525
1526 @example
1527 (add-hook 'rmail-show-message-hook 'icalendar-import-buffer)
1528 @end example
1529
1530 @findex icalendar-import-file
1531 The command @code{icalendar-import-file} imports an iCalendar file
1532 and adds the results to an Emacs diary file. For example:
1533
1534 @example
1535 (icalendar-import-file "/here/is/calendar.ics"
1536 "/there/goes/ical-diary")
1537 @end example
1538
1539 @noindent
1540 You can use an @code{#include} directive to add the import file contents
1541 to the main diary file, if these are different files.
1542 @iftex
1543 @inforef{Fancy Diary Display,, emacs-xtra}.
1544 @end iftex
1545 @ifnottex
1546 @xref{Fancy Diary Display}.
1547 @end ifnottex
1548
1549
1550 @findex icalendar-export-file, icalendar-export-region
1551 Use @code{icalendar-export-file} to interactively export an entire
1552 Emacs diary file to iCalendar format. To export only a part of a diary
1553 file, mark the relevant area, and call @code{icalendar-export-region}.
1554 In both cases the result is appended to the target file.
1555
1556 @node Daylight Savings
1557 @section Daylight Savings Time
1558 @cindex daylight savings time
1559
1560 Emacs understands the difference between standard time and daylight
1561 savings time---the times given for sunrise, sunset, solstices,
1562 equinoxes, and the phases of the moon take that into account. The rules
1563 for daylight savings time vary from place to place and have also varied
1564 historically from year to year. To do the job properly, Emacs needs to
1565 know which rules to use.
1566
1567 @vindex calendar-daylight-savings-starts
1568 @vindex calendar-daylight-savings-ends
1569 Some operating systems keep track of the rules that apply to the place
1570 where you are; on these systems, Emacs gets the information it needs
1571 from the system automatically. If some or all of this information is
1572 missing, Emacs fills in the gaps with the rules currently used in
1573 Cambridge, Massachusetts. If the resulting rules are not what you want,
1574 you can tell Emacs the rules to use by setting certain variables:
1575 @code{calendar-daylight-savings-starts} and
1576 @code{calendar-daylight-savings-ends}.
1577
1578 These values should be Lisp expressions that refer to the variable
1579 @code{year}, and evaluate to the Gregorian date on which daylight
1580 savings time starts or (respectively) ends, in the form of a list
1581 @code{(@var{month} @var{day} @var{year})}. The values should be
1582 @code{nil} if your area does not use daylight savings time.
1583
1584 Emacs uses these expressions to determine the starting date of
1585 daylight savings time for the holiday list and for correcting times of
1586 day in the solar and lunar calculations.
1587
1588 The values for Cambridge, Massachusetts are as follows:
1589
1590 @example
1591 (calendar-nth-named-day 2 0 3 year)
1592 (calendar-nth-named-day 1 0 11 year)
1593 @end example
1594
1595 @noindent
1596 That is, the second 0th day (Sunday) of the third month (March) in
1597 the year specified by @code{year}, and the first Sunday of the eleventh month
1598 (November) of that year. If daylight savings time were
1599 changed to start on October 1, you would set
1600 @code{calendar-daylight-savings-starts} to this:
1601
1602 @example
1603 (list 10 1 year)
1604 @end example
1605
1606 If there is no daylight savings time at your location, or if you want
1607 all times in standard time, set @code{calendar-daylight-savings-starts}
1608 and @code{calendar-daylight-savings-ends} to @code{nil}.
1609
1610 @vindex calendar-daylight-time-offset
1611 The variable @code{calendar-daylight-time-offset} specifies the
1612 difference between daylight savings time and standard time, measured in
1613 minutes. The value for Cambridge, Massachusetts is 60.
1614
1615 @c @vindex calendar-daylight-savings-starts-time too long!
1616 @vindex calendar-daylight-savings-ends-time
1617 The two variables @code{calendar-daylight-savings-starts-time} and
1618 @code{calendar-daylight-savings-ends-time} specify the number of minutes
1619 after midnight local time when the transition to and from daylight
1620 savings time should occur. For Cambridge, Massachusetts both variables'
1621 values are 120.
1622
1623 @node Time Intervals
1624 @section Summing Time Intervals
1625 @cindex time intervals, summing
1626 @cindex summing time intervals
1627 @cindex timeclock
1628
1629 The timeclock feature adds up time intervals, so you can (for
1630 instance) keep track of how much time you spend working on particular
1631 projects.
1632
1633 @findex timeclock-in
1634 @findex timeclock-out
1635 @findex timeclock-change
1636 @findex timeclock-workday-remaining
1637 @findex timeclock-when-to-leave
1638 Use the @kbd{M-x timeclock-in} command when you start working on a
1639 project, and @kbd{M-x timeclock-out} command when you're done. Each
1640 time you do this, it adds one time interval to the record of the
1641 project. You can change to working on a different project with @kbd{M-x
1642 timeclock-change}.
1643
1644 Once you've collected data from a number of time intervals, you can use
1645 @kbd{M-x timeclock-workday-remaining} to see how much time is left to
1646 work today (assuming a typical average of 8 hours a day), and @kbd{M-x
1647 timeclock-when-to-leave} which will calculate when you're ``done.''
1648
1649 @vindex timeclock-modeline-display
1650 @findex timeclock-modeline-display
1651 If you want Emacs to display the amount of time ``left'' of your
1652 workday in the mode line, either customize the
1653 @code{timeclock-modeline-display} variable and set its value to
1654 @code{t}, or invoke the @kbd{M-x timeclock-modeline-display} command.
1655
1656 @vindex timeclock-ask-before-exiting
1657 Terminating the current Emacs session might or might not mean that
1658 you have stopped working on the project and, by default, Emacs asks
1659 you. You can, however, set the value of the variable
1660 @code{timeclock-ask-before-exiting} to @code{nil} (via @kbd{M-x
1661 customize}) to avoid the question; then, only an explicit @kbd{M-x
1662 timeclock-out} or @kbd{M-x timeclock-change} will tell Emacs that the
1663 current interval is over.
1664
1665 @cindex @file{.timelog} file
1666 @vindex timeclock-file
1667 @findex timeclock-reread-log
1668 The timeclock functions work by accumulating the data in a file
1669 called @file{.timelog} in your home directory. You can specify a
1670 different name for this file by customizing the variable
1671 @code{timeclock-file}. If you edit the timeclock file manually, or if
1672 you change the value of any of timeclock's customizable variables, you
1673 should run the command @kbd{M-x timeclock-reread-log} to update the
1674 data in Emacs from the file.
1675
1676 @ifnottex
1677 @include cal-xtra.texi
1678 @end ifnottex
1679
1680 @ignore
1681 arch-tag: 4531ef09-9df3-449d-9c52-2b5a4a337f92
1682 @end ignore