Adapted from http://www.emacswiki.org/PersonalDiary
Functions to maintain a simple personal diary / journal using in Emacs.
Feel free to use, modify and improve the code! — mtvoid, bastibe
org-journal
maintains a set of files, where each file represents a day. Convenient
bindings allow the creation of journal records in the current daily file and search within
all records or specified time intervals. All records can be browsed and searched from the
Emacs Calendar for convenience. All entries in a specified TODO state will be carried over
to the next day. Optionally, the journal can also be encrypted.
An example of a daily file (it will actually look a lot nicer, depending on your org-mode settings):
* Tuesday, 06/04/13 ** 10:28 Company meeting Endless discussions about projects. Not much progress ** 11:33 Work on org-journal :org-journal: For the longest time, I wanted to have a cool diary app on my computer. However, I simply lacked the right tool for that job. After many hours of searching, I finally found PersonalDiary on EmacsWiki. PersonalDiary is a very simple diary system based on the emacs calendar. It works pretty well, but I don't really like that it only uses unstructured text. Thus, I spent the last two hours making that diary use org-mode and represent every entry as an org-mode headline. Very cool! ** 15:33 Work on org-journal :org-journal: Now my journal automatically creates the right headlines (adds the current time stamp if on the current day, does not add a time stamp for any other day). Additionally, it automatically collapses the headlines in the org-file to the right level (shows everything if in view mode, shows only headlines in new-entry-mode). Emacs and elisp are really cool! ** 16:40 Work on org-journal :org-journal: I uploaded my journal mode to marmalade and Github! Awesome! ** TODO teach org-journal how to brew coffee :org-journal:
org-journal
is available through marmalade, melpa and melpa-stable. So installation
should be trivial:
C-x package-install org-journal
Then add (require 'org-journal)
to your .emacs
.
Doing C-x org-journal-new-entry
(or C-c C-j
) will immediately create a journal
directory in the default path (customized using the org-journal-dir
variable), open or
create a file in org-journal-mode
, and insert a template for a new journal entry.
The same command with a prefix argument (C-u C-c C-j
) will do everything mentioned while
skipping entry creation, which is useful for looking at the current journal file.
Bindings available in org-journal-mode
:
C-c C-f
- go to the next journal file.C-c C-b
- go to the previous journal file.C-c C-j
- insert a new entry into the current journal file (creates the file if not present).C-c C-s
- search the journal for a string.
All journal entries are registered in the Emacs Calendar. To see available journal
entries do C-x calendar
. Bindings available in the calendar-mode
:
j
- view an entry in a new buffer.C-j
- view an entry but do not switch to it.i j
- add a new entry into the day’s file (creates the file if not present).f w
- search in all entries of the current week.f m
- search in all entries of the current month.f y
- search in all entries of the current year.f f
- search in all entries of all time.[
- go to previous day with journal entries.]
- go to next day with journal entries.
Customization options related to journal directory and files:
org-journal-dir
- the journal path. Tweaking this variable will also updateauto-mode-alist
to ensure journal files are opened inorg-journal-mode
.org-journal-file-format
- format string for journal file names.org-journal-find-file
- a function to use when opening a journal file. By default it opens a window usingfind-file-other-window
. Set this tofind-file
if you don’t want org-journal to split your window.
Customization options related to the journal file contents:
org-journal-date-format
- date format formatorg-journal
uses when showing a date within a journal and search results page.org-journal-date-prefix
- this string will prefix the date at the top of a journal file.org-journal-time-format
- a timestamp format that will prefix every entry within a daily journal file.org-journal-time-prefix
- a string that will prefix every entry within a daily journal file.
org-journal
has two searching options: the usual org-mode
agenda search and the
built-in plain text search. The former can become slow with bigger journals, so the
built-in search is a recommended option.
To use the agenda search, you can add all the calendar files to your org-agenda by adding
org-journal-dir
to org-agenda-files
and setting org-agenda-file-regexp
to include
files with an all-numeric name:
\\`[^.].*\\.org\\'\\|[0-9]+\\'
That way, you can use org-agenda to search for TODO items or tagged items in your org-journal.
The built-in search is available through the following function: org-journal-search
(C-c C-s
in org-journal-mode
). By default, it will ask for the time interval to search
within (accepting the org-read-date
format such as “-1y” or “-1m”) and the string to
search for. Given a prefix argument (C-u org-journal-search
), it will go through the
whole journal.
The order of the search results (ascending or descending by date) can be customized using
the org-journal-search-results-order-by
variable.
Search is also available through the Emacs Calendar as described in “Basic Usage”.
By default, org-journal
will try to carry over previous day TODO-marked items whenever
a new journal file is created. The older journal entry will be moved (i.e., deleted and
reinserted) to the current day’s file.
This feature is controlled through the org-journal-carryover-items
variable. Set this to
nil
to disable this feature, or to any agenda tags view match string for a set of
matching tags, properties, and todo states. By default, this is TODO=”TODO”
, which will
match TODO items.
The journal can be encrypted using org-crypt
when org-journal-enable-encryption
is non-nil.
org-journal
currently only supports daily entries.
At the moment, this is not possible. But it should be possible to switch the value of
org-journal-directory
using a custom function or directory local variables.
To use org-journal
with Spacemacs, you can:
git clone https://github.com/borgnix/spacemacs-journal.git ~/.emacs.d/private/journal
- add it to your
~/.spacemacs
. You will need to addjournal
to the existingdotspacemacs-configuration-layers
list in this file.
The manual of the journal layer can be found at https://github.com/borgnix/spacemacs-journal
See CONTRIBUTORS.
See CHANGELOG.