Hi all, Entering "7.2.12" as an incative timestamp (C-c !) I get [2012-03-16 Fr]. Entering "7.2.2012" results in [2012-02-07 Di]. I have german settings in my emacs. Is there a chance to get wanted behaviour? "dd.mm.yy" seems to be a standard calendar date format. - Rainer
Hi Rainer,
On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 11:12, Rainer Stengele
<rainer.stengele@online.de> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Entering "7.2.12" as an incative timestamp (C-c !)
>
> I get [2012-03-16 Fr].
>
> Entering "7.2.2012" results in [2012-02-07 Di].
>
> I have german settings in my emacs.
> Is there a chance to get wanted behaviour?
>
> "dd.mm.yy" seems to be a standard calendar date format.
>
You could try customising `calendar-date-style'.
--
Suvayu
Open source is the future. It sets us free.
Hi Ali,
I already have european style configured but that does not accept dd.mm.yy
Seems I have to stick with dd.mm.yyyy - no major problem, I just thought this could be configured a little bit more detailled.
Thanks,
Rainer
Am 16.03.2012 11:22, schrieb suvayu ali:
> Hi Rainer,
>
> On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 11:12, Rainer Stengele
> <rainer.stengele@online.de> wrote:
>> Hi all,
>>
>> Entering "7.2.12" as an incative timestamp (C-c !)
>>
>> I get [2012-03-16 Fr].
>>
>> Entering "7.2.2012" results in [2012-02-07 Di].
>>
>> I have german settings in my emacs.
>> Is there a chance to get wanted behaviour?
>>
>> "dd.mm.yy" seems to be a standard calendar date format.
>>
>
> You could try customising `calendar-date-style'.
>
Rainer Stengele <rainer.stengele@online.de> writes: > Entering "7.2.12" as an incative timestamp (C-c !) > > I get [2012-03-16 Fr]. > > Entering "7.2.2012" results in [2012-02-07 Di]. > > I have german settings in my emacs. > Is there a chance to get wanted behaviour? > > "dd.mm.yy" seems to be a standard calendar date format. I think its not possible, from org.el: #v+ (defconst org-time-stamp-formats '("<%Y-%m-%d %a>" . "<%Y-%m-%d %a %H:%M>") "Formats for `format-time-string' which are used for time stamps. It is not recommended to change this constant.") #v- One solution is to customize `org-time-stamp-custom-formats'. Use `#+STARTUP: customtime' in your file or/and set `org-display-custom-times' to `t'. Hm, and you should read this <http://orgmode.org/manual/Custom-time-format.html>. Frank -- http://fhaun.blogspot.com/