TimeBlok
What is TimeBlok?
TimeBlok is a simple, declarative DSL that combines the versatility and extensibility of plain text with the convenience of digital calendars for personal calendar planning.
Inspired by Cal Newport's Text File Time Blocking, TimeBlok offers a minimalistic syntax for organizing your schedule within plain text files, as well as the ability to compile to .ics files for use in any calendar application.
Examples
Daily planning
This is the simplest use case
2023-1-1
7:30am wake up & eat beakfast
8am~11:30 work on TimeBlok
- Write Technical Documentation
2pm~6pm Study for exams
8pm~10pm Reading
- Finish an entire book
When compiled into an .ics file, this could be imported into your calendar.

Monthly planning
2023-1- // Locks in the following events to 2023-1
{--1~--10 and workday} // workdays from jan 1 to jan 10
7:30am wake up to a new day
10am ~ 11am work on EvilCorp
{sun}
4pm weekly review //weekly review every sunday
--11
8am~10am Resign from EvilCorp
- Make sure you still have access to the servers
-2- // This overrides the month information from line 1.
--1
3pm~4pm Initiate operation "Hack the planet"
After resolving, this could be imported into your calendar:

Installation
Currently, a Rust installation is required.
Installing from cargo:
Usage
Exporting to file:
Exporting & opening in default calendar application:
Create a new plan file and open it in your calendar app:
Help:
Specs
The TimeBlock language currently recognizes three types of statements(by order of precedence):
- Event
- Occasion
- Notes
- Filters
Occasion is any single line that describes a point in time, usually dates in YYYY-MM-DD format.
It can be a date, a time, or a date and time.
Occasions will inherit the not specified fields from the closest previous occasion.
The first occasion inserted into scope will be the creation date of the target file.
E.g. If the previous occasion is 2024-3-, then --3 will be interpreted as 2024-3-3.
An Event is a line of text that starts with an Occasion or Range and is followed by text indicating the event's name.
A Note just a line of text, if it occurs after an Event, it is considered a note for that event, which will correspond to the
DESCRIPTION field of an ics entry.
A Range is simply a pair of Occasions, separated by a ~, indicating, well, a time-range.
Filters
Filters are a special type of statement that can be used to filter out dates, events, numbers in a specified range.
Filters can be nested and combined to represent complex logic and recurring events.
Syntactically, they are enclosed in curly braces {}.
In the process of resolving, filters binds to the last specified Occasion, iterates through all possible values that fits the occasion,
and selects those that fits the criteria for the filter.
For example, consider the following filter:
-2-
{--1~--10 and workday}
This filter bounds to the occasion -2-, in which the year of the occasion could be inherited from previous occasions(by default the creation date of the file)
, and the date is unspecified.
Thus, the filter will iterate through all possible dates in February.
Since the two sub-filters are joined by an and clause, the filter will only select those dates that are both in the range --1~--10 and are workdays.
The following filters are currently supported:
- Basic logic filters:
and,or,not - Range filters: filters all dates in a range, eg.
--1~--10filters all dates with day value 1 to 10 in the inferred year and month - Day-of-week filters:
workday,weekend,sunday,monday,tuesday,wednesday,thursday,friday,saturday(shorthandmon~sunis also supported) - "Flexible date filters": basically a shorthand for range filters, eg.
--{1~10}is equivalent to--1~--10
More filters are planned to be added in the future. (My current priority is to support region specific resolving of workdays based on workalendar)