Using Applescript or Automator to edit a calendar to move "bump" all events forward one day - macos

I want to be able to move all events within my mac calendar up one day, ideally with the ability to exclude weekends.
Use Case: A training program had 10 weeks of daily sessions. The calendar is uploaded via csv edited for start days and skipped days. If one were to miss a day they were able to simple push all the events forward one day.
I have looked at Automator and there doesn't appear to be a simple way to set this up with the exception of possibly a folder action option.
Anyone ever do something like this?

I'd be careful about AppleScripting Calendar.app in Catalina onwards, as it's now extremely buggy and very easy to incur data loss when something goes wrong.
However, a non-scripting solution would be to cut and paste the events whilst viewing them in Month view:
Select all the events that you wish to bring forward, which is best done starting with the last, so you end up at the first;
If you deselect all other calendars so that the only events visible are the ones in your training programme (I presume these are stored in their own calendar, right...?!), then you can ⌘A to Select All, being careful to deselect the ones that overlap from the previous month or into the next month. Individual events are selected/deselected by holding down ⌘ and clicking the event.
Hit ⌘X to Cut them to the clipboard;
Use the mouse to single-click the day previous to one that contained the first event;
Hit ⌘V to Paste the events, the first of which will be pasted into the day that you clicked in step ⓷, with the remaining events repositioned by the same relative amount as was the first.

Related

Mac App — date time stamp every mouse click

I want to create a data visualization that maps my mouse clicks through time. To do that, I need to collect data of time stamps for my mouse clicks.
I’m using Mouse Mile to total how far my mouse moves, count clicks and keystrokes. However, it just gives me a total number.
Is there an existing application that I can run on Mac in the background that creates a .csv of time stamps every time I click?
(I understand how I could do this, for example, with JavaScript in a browser, but I want it to be running whenever my computer is awake.)
Thanks all.

disable mouse multiclick and change doubleclick interval

is there a way to disable multiclicks? By multiclicks I mean 3-or more clicks. I would like to have only singleClick or doubleClick. The third click should be always registered as singleClick (clicks=1). event.mouse.clicks should always be <= 2.
Another problem is the interval between clicks. If I click multiple times on the same spot between 1-2 seconds, it is always registered as a multiClick (event.mouse.clicks keeps rising). Only if I move the cursor a bit, clicks would lover to 1. How can I change this behavior so the interval between click and doubleClick will be around 1/4 second?
Solution is to have a separate thread which reads the SDL information, then do a debounce algorithm to remove the unwanted clicks. I did this for a touch screen, which is too sensitive. After filtering, you should get what you want. Then the filtered events you put in a queue (std::deque) which can be used for the real user interface to get events.
The open source project https://sourceforge.net/p/sdl2ui/wiki/Home/ has a class CdialogEvent which is may just what you need.

Is there a notification for when the calendar changes via System Preferences?

My app draws a calendar. I have an ivar, _cal, set to -[NSCalendar autoupdatingCurrentCalendar] because I'd like to redraw the calendar if the user makes a change in System Preferences. For example, they could change the first day of week from Sunday to something else.
Currently, I'm using an NSTimer that fires every second. I check [_cal firstWeekday] against a cached copy to see if it has changed. If so, I redraw.
I'm wondering if instead there is a way for me to be notified if the System Preferences affecting the calendar have changed. Then, I could get rid of my NSTimer.
It looks like you can observer NSCurrentLocaleDidChangeNotification.
See https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/#documentation/Cocoa/Reference/Foundation/Classes/NSLocale_Class/Reference/Reference.html#//apple_ref/doc/uid/TP30001224-DontLinkElementID_1

Showing a list of events

Our site, http://www.racedayworld.com has events that you can register for which are listed in an accordion control by each month ..
I've been getting feedback that says people aren't looking past the first open month as they are not too familiar with the whole accordion thing ..
Can anyone post any suggestions on what type of control I could use that would work - I wanted to do something which wasn't just a normal boring table, but I haven't been really able to think of anything as of yet .. let me know if you have any suggestions..
How about a tree view, or something like the MacOS Finder? On the left a scrolling pane with each month, saying "January: 12 Events" or similar on each line. Then clicking that updates the right pane to a scrollable list of the events...
Done with unobtrusive javascript of course so it degrades nicely. No clues in your tags if you're doing this in Flash...
You might want to consider keeping the control and just do something to draw attention to it. For example, add a "swoopy" arrow that points to the second month with the words "click here for more events!". Just make sure you can disable that once someone expands that second month.

What's the best approach to get Date/Time input from the user?

This is a wheel that's been re-invented again and again over the years.
The Problem: The user needs to input a Date/Time
Basic considerations
We want to make it as easy as possible for the user to enter the desired date/time
Some applications call for historical dates, some applications call for future dates only, some will need to handle both
We want to prevent the user from entering jibberish data
We want to auto-populate this control as aggressively as possible.
We want this control to be as re-usable as possible.
Popular solutions include:
Text Boxes
Combo Boxes
Pop-out calendars
Server-side and/or client-side validation
Various ways of alerting the users about bad data
There are a panoply of ready-to-eat solutions about, but I'm looking for some more general information. Have there been any usability studies done on the various date-time-control approaches? Is there a "best" date-time control out there? Are there any well-established "Dos and Don'ts"?
Related question: Best GUI control(s) to describe a time range
My preference is for a text input with an elipsis button next to it:
Enter a date [ ] [...]
The elipsis would pop up a calendar to populate the text input, but the user can type in a date if they want. Validation should be done when the "OK" button for the form is pressed - trying to do date validation on a character by character basis is doomed, in my experience.
The validation should be sophisticated and allow expressions like
"today"
"Tomorrow"
"23 Jan"
etc.
Edit: In reply to some comments, one could do validation when the text edit loses focus (though I hate that kind of thing) in which case the edit content could change from "23 Jan" to "23-01-2009" to indicate that the exprssion was understood.
Give me a calendar to select the date with a mouse. And let me type the date in with the keyboard. Accept as many formats as possible. If I need to enter December 21, 2012, let me use:
Dec 21 2012
21DEC2012
December 21 2012
12/21/2012 (or 21/12/2012, pick one, perhaps depending on what country I'm using the software in)
12212012 (same parenthetical fragment as above)
Etc.
Whatever you decide to do to solve the localization issue, make sure it's obvious what you expect. Give me an example, or a template with MMDDYYYY that I can type over.
Please don't give me pull-down boxes where I have to scroll, especially through years. If I'm old, and I'm entering my DOB, I don't have enough time left in my life to scroll down to the bottom of your pull-down box. Pull-down boxes are a good pattern to use when I don't know what the options are, but if it's something I'm very familiar with, like my birth date, then pull-down menus are a hassle.
Now, WRT time inputs (Big pet peeve), don't assume that I meant 3 am. If I enter 3 for the time, assume I meant 3 pm. Make me do extra work to schedule something at 3 am. If you're uncomfortable with assuming that much on my behalf, at least alert me that I've scheduled something for 3 am so I can fix it now instead of later when someone on my event invitation list emails and says "You moron, you scheduled our D&D Meetup for 3 am!"
I think the date range entry on Google Calendar is quite good. You can enter by keyboard or by mouse. The only quibble would be in entering dates for a different year.
You can do it easily enough via the keyboard, but they should have a second set of little arrows on the calendar to jump a year at a time back or forth using the mouse.
EDIT: In response to the question, "What if you want to schedule an event that goes from 11PM on Tuesday till 1AM on Wednesday (say a daily build, for instance)? How do you wrap the time over midnight?"
If the "to" time pushes it over midnight, then roll the "to" date to the next day. That would just be part of the business logic of the component. You'll notice in the second image above, the drop-down indicates both the end time and the duration of the event, which should be a hint.
If you try and put an end date earlier than the start date, you can highlight the background colour of the fields and/or show an error message on save.
Play around on Google Calendar and see how it behaves.
I'd suggest you also allow for users who like to type rather than click on a calendar control, so a combination of text box + popup calendar works well.
We created a custom control with just such a combination. User can type a date in a variety of formats in the textbox, or click on a button to pop up the calendar.
We allow all sorts of input like "today", "wed", or "+2" (for day after tomorrow) and use regular expressions for most of the validation client side. We also do server side validation of course.
The control also has an optional textbox for time which can be enabled or hidden by a property. We felt it was easier to separate date from time. For times, we allow "9pm", "2100", "09:00" etc.
The control caters for a min and max date, so that date of birth can have a range from say -100 years to current year, while credit card expiry might range from current year to +5 years, and so we use range validators.
A text box with an image-link to a pop-out calendar on the side is my choice. Best of both worlds.
If you want something extra you could let a natural language date/time parser like Chronic http://chronic.rubyforge.org/ spice it up.
Also don't forget the international users.
If you're going for the combo-box/list-box option make sure you make the months read "Jan","Feb"..."Dec" rather than "1","2"..."12".
It's rather annoying having to figure out which slot is the month and which is the day according to the ranges of the values.
I'd go for three alternatives depending on the situation:
2 combo boxes. One listing year + month, another the day
3 combo boxes. One listing years, one month, one days
Visible calendar/s and combos like this one from YUI
And I believe there are more options from which I'd choose.
You need to check your UI requirements. If you want script-enabled support only, they you can go with any of your panopoly of scripts and run with whatever date/time format they provide into a hidden field.
However, if you need the user entry in a textbox, then you're faced with some decisions:
Is the date/time format rigid? e.g. mm/dd/yyy hh:mm:ss format only?
Or loosely defined, to allow for the "today", "tomorrow", "23 Jan" style entries?
Will the formats be locale-specific? e.g. mm/dd/yyyy vs. dd/mm/yyyy
Validation methods depend on your decisions on requirements.
I like the jQuery date-picker plugin. It'll allow output in specific formats.
A calendar showing multiple months continuously: http://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/salaakso/patterns/Calendar-Strip.html
I've always found Google Calendar easy to use in this respect. You could certainly do worse than trying to emulate it. The key is to give the user a lot of flexibility in how they enter information. For example, I can select a time from a drop down list or type it in manually, and when I type, I'm not required to include the colon or the "m" in "pm".
I really like the way QT4's Date/Time widget works.
You can enter dates manually (type in the date, in common formats).
You can use your scroll wheel to quickly change date/time fields.
You have an expandable calendar that has drop down months and forward/backward arrows for the months. You can click on specific days and enter the year manually, or with a combo box (scroll wheel works here too).
Here is a short video (~7.5MB) that shows how the widget works and what some of its features are: Video Here
I would expect any sophisticated application to have some or all of these features.
Being able to enter relative dates (today, last week, 3 days ago) is handy, but I'm not sure how practical it would be, given standard questions like "What is your date of birth?", or "When would you like X emailed to you?".
you can use plugin cxcalendar. It looks like other datepicker. but you can pick year and month in select after clicking year-month title.

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