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From: "Daniel E. Doherty" <ded@ddoherty.net>
To: nicholas.dokos@hp.com
Cc: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org, Carsten Dominik <carsten.dominik@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Re: Date Prompt Bug (or Anomoly)
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 2010 03:31:34 -0500	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <4C0F5166.3070207@ddoherty.net> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <16364.1276036049@alphaville.usa.hp.com>

On 06/08/2010 05:27 PM, Nick Dokos wrote:

Carsten and Nick,

Many thanks, that did it.  (I wasn't re-making the .elc's---'Doh).

Dan
> Daniel E. Doherty<ded-law@ddoherty.net>  wrote:
>
>    
>> Carsten,
>>
>> When I tried this last Saturday, I was reluctant to reply since the git
>> server appeared to be down and your message made me think I did not have
>> the latest git version.  I tried it again today, and still no joy.  I am
>> using org-mode version 6.36a on emacs 23.1 on ubuntu.
>>
>> The latest entry in the Changelog file is
>> ,----
>> | 2010-06-08  Christian Egli<christian.egli@sbszh.ch>
>> |
>> | 	* org-taskjuggler.el (org-export-taskjuggler-old-level):
>> | 	define local variable to avoid compiler warning.
>> `----
>>
>> The following is straight from an org file:
>>
>> ,----
>> | Attempted on:<2010-06-08 Tue>.
>> | Entering "3/21":<2021-07-03 Sat>.
>> | Entering "7/21":<2021-07-07 Wed>.
>> `----
>>
>> I assume that the fix would be in the function org-read-date-analyze,
>> but I see no recent Changelog entries mentioning it.  Is it possible
>> this got lost while the git server was down?
>>
>>      
> No, it is fixed by the following commit, but 6.36a is too old to include
> it. Either you did not get the updates you thought you did, or you did
> not remake your org, or you did not reload the newly made org. Try
>
>       git show 420dd96768262cb15c8bcf4fa6386361e0327add
>
> in your git repository to see whether you have the update. If you don't,
> pull again. If you do have it, do
>
>          make clean; make
>
> and in emacs
>
>          M-x org-reload
>
> Then
>          M-x org-version
>
> should say something like:
>
>          Org-mode version 6.36trans (release_6.36.155.g420d)
>
> HTH,
> Nick
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
> commit 420dd96768262cb15c8bcf4fa6386361e0327add
> Author: Carsten Dominik<carsten.dominik@gmail.com>
> Date:   Fri Jun 4 12:29:31 2010 +0200
>
>      Fix the date prompt for american-style dates
>
>      * lisp/org.el (org-read-date-analyze): Fix regular expression for
>      matching american dates
>
>      Daniel E. Doherty writes:
>
>      >  In playing around with the date prompt (C-.), I ran across the following
>      >  puzzling behavior from rather simple inputs.
>      >
>      >  I entered the following on June 1, 2010.  Here is a date entered as
>      >  "3/15":<2011-03-15 Tue>.  It interpreted it as the upcoming March 15 as
>      >  expected.
>      >
>      >  But here is a date entered as "5/21":<2021-06-05 Sat>.  Note how it
>      >  interpreted the "21" as the year 2021, not at all what I expected from
>      >  the documentation or the analogous "3/15" example.
>      >
>      >  Maybe there is some underlying logic here that I'm not getting.  Perhaps
>      >  it has to do with how 2-digit years are interpreted?
>      >
>      >  What's going on here?  I am using org-version 6.36trans on emacs 23.1.
>
>      What was going on here is that the regular expression for matching
>      american-style dates was wrong.  It was looking for month numbers in
>      the second field and day numbers in the first field - wrong, of
>      course.
>
> diff --git a/lisp/org.el b/lisp/org.el
> index 64044b4..48fd215 100644
> --- a/lisp/org.el
> +++ b/lisp/org.el
> @@ -13942,10 +13942,15 @@ The prompt will suggest to enter an ISO date, but you can also enter anything
>   which will at least partially be understood by `parse-time-string'.
>   Unrecognized parts of the date will default to the current day, month, year,
>   hour and minute.  If this command is called to replace a timestamp at point,
> -of to enter the second timestamp of a range, the default time is taken from the
> -existing stamp.  For example,
> +of to enter the second timestamp of a range, the default time is taken
> +from the existing stamp.  Furthermore, the command prefers the future,
> +so if you are giving a date where the year is not given, and the day-month
> +combination is already past in the current year, it will assume you
> +mean next year.  For details, see the manual.  A few examples:
> +
>     3-2-5         -->  2003-02-05
>     feb 15        -->  currentyear-02-15
> +  2/15          -->  currentyear-02-15
>     sep 12 9      -->  2009-09-12
>     12:45         -->  today 12:45
>     22 sept 0:34  -->  currentyear-09-22 0:34
> @@ -14191,7 +14196,7 @@ user."
>   			       t nil ans)))
>       ;; Help matching american dates, like 5/30 or 5/30/7
>       (when (string-match
> -	   "^ *\\([0-3]?[0-9]\\)/\\([0-1]?[0-9]\\)\\(/\\([0-9]+\\)\\)?\\([^/0-9]\\|$\\)" ans)
> +	   "^ *\\(0?[1-9]\\|1[012]\\)/\\(0?[1-9]\\|[12][0-9]\\|3[01]\\)\\(/\\([0-9]+\\)\\)?\\([^/0-9]\\|$\\)" ans)
>         (setq year (if (match-end 4)
>   		     (string-to-number (match-string 4 ans))
>   		   (progn (setq kill-year t)
>    

  reply	other threads:[~2010-06-09  8:31 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 12+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2010-06-01 17:41 Date Prompt Bug (or Anomoly) Daniel E. Doherty
2010-06-04  8:47 ` Noorul Islam K M
2010-06-04  8:48   ` Noorul Islam K M
2010-06-04  9:39     ` Mikael Fornius
2010-06-04 11:00       ` Carsten Dominik
2010-06-04 15:16         ` Daniel E. Doherty
2010-06-05 17:43         ` Daniel E. Doherty
2010-06-06  4:20           ` Carsten Dominik
2010-06-08 20:45             ` Daniel E. Doherty
2010-06-08 22:27               ` Nick Dokos
2010-06-09  8:31                 ` Daniel E. Doherty [this message]
2010-06-08 22:28               ` Carsten Dominik

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