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authorKlaus Schmidinger <vdr@tvdr.de>2002-02-17 13:05:05 +0100
committerKlaus Schmidinger <vdr@tvdr.de>2002-02-17 13:05:05 +0100
commita87e7625ddf38cd2e653a256899e9119505e92ac (patch)
tree34f4c7fc34fc42cc6f95c1d18b282b01937a19ae /FORMATS
parent3ecbdd489e19a1844843fc1e5e60a689908ffc02 (diff)
downloadvdr-a87e7625ddf38cd2e653a256899e9119505e92ac.tar.gz
vdr-a87e7625ddf38cd2e653a256899e9119505e92ac.tar.bz2
Implemented the 'First day' parameter for repeating timers
Diffstat (limited to 'FORMATS')
-rw-r--r--FORMATS11
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/FORMATS b/FORMATS
index d7d4293c..3e1ff868 100644
--- a/FORMATS
+++ b/FORMATS
@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ Video Disk Recorder File Formats
and recognize if the user has modified them. When a user modifes an active
timer the 'active' field will be explicitly set to '1'.
- Program number of the channel to record
- - Day of recording, either one or more of
+ - Day of recording (in case of a repeating timer), either one or more of
M------ = Monday
-T----- = Tuesday
--W---- = Wednesday
@@ -61,7 +61,14 @@ Video Disk Recorder File Formats
(any combination is possible, for example MTWTF--, and the days may be
indicated by any characters except '-', so for example ABC---- would set
a timer that records on monday, tuesday and wednesday) or the "day of month"
- (1..31)
+ (1..31) in case of a single shot timer.
+ The day definition of a repeating timer may be followed by the date when that
+ timer shall hit for the first time. The format for this is @YYYY-MM-DD,
+ so a complete definition could look like this: MTWTF--@2002-02-18. This
+ "first day" feature can be used to disable a repeating timer for a couple
+ of days, or for instance to define a new Mon...Fri timer on wednesday, which
+ actually starts "monday next week". The "first day" date given need not be
+ that of a day when the timer would actually hit.
- Start time (first two digits for the hour, second two digits for the minutes)
- End time (first two digits for the hour, second two digits for the minutes)
- Priority (from 0 to 99, 0 = lowest prioity, 99 = highest priority)