Feature: Reading and writing to journal with custom date formats Scenario: Dates can include a time # https://github.com/jrnl-org/jrnl/issues/117 Given we use the config "simple.yaml" When we run "jrnl 2013-11-30 15:42: Project Started." Then we should see the message "Entry added" When we run "jrnl -999" Then the output should contain "2013-11-30 15:42 Project Started." Scenario: Dates can be in the future # https://github.com/jrnl-org/jrnl/issues/185 Given we use the config "simple.yaml" When we run "jrnl 26/06/2099: Planet? Earth. Year? 2099." Then we should see the message "Entry added" When we run "jrnl -999" Then the output should contain "2099-06-26 09:00 Planet?" Scenario: Loading a sample journal with custom date Given we use the config "little_endian_dates.yaml" When we run "jrnl -n 2" Then we should get no error When we run "jrnl -n 999" Then the output should be 09.06.2013 15:39 My first entry. | Everything is alright 10.07.2013 15:40 Life is good. | But I'm better. Scenario Outline: Writing an entry from command line with custom date Given we use the config "" When we run "jrnl " Then we should see the message "Entry added" When we run "jrnl -n 1" Then the output should contain "" Examples: Day-first Dates | config_file | command | output | | little_endian_dates.yaml | 2020-09-19: My first entry. | 19.09.2020 09:00 My first entry. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | 2020-08-09: My second entry. | 09.08.2020 09:00 My second entry. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | 2020-02-29: Test. | 29.02.2020 09:00 Test. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | 2019-02-29: Test. | 2019-02-29: Test. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | 2020-08-32: Test. | 2020-08-32: Test. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | 2032-02-01: Test. | 01.02.2032 09:00 Test. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | 2020-01-01: Test. | 01.01.2020 09:00 Test. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | 2020-12-31: Test. | 31.12.2020 09:00 Test. | Scenario Outline: Searching for dates with custom date Given we use the config "" When we run "jrnl " Then the output should be "" Examples: Day-first Dates | config_file | command | output | | little_endian_dates.yaml | -on '2013-07-10' --short | 10.07.2013 15:40 Life is good. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | -on 'june 9 2013' --short | 09.06.2013 15:39 My first entry. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | -on 'july 10 2013' --short | 10.07.2013 15:40 Life is good. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | -on 'june 2013' --short | 09.06.2013 15:39 My first entry. | | little_endian_dates.yaml | -on 'july 2013' --short | 10.07.2013 15:40 Life is good. | # @todo month alone with no year should work # | little_endian_dates.yaml | -on 'june' --short | 09.06.2013 15:39 My first entry. | # | little_endian_dates.yaml | -on 'july' --short | 10.07.2013 15:40 Life is good. | Scenario: Writing an entry at the prompt with custom date Given we use the config "little_endian_dates.yaml" When we run "jrnl" and enter "2013-05-10: I saw Elvis. He's alive." Then we should get no error When we run "jrnl -999" Then the output should contain "10.05.2013 09:00 I saw Elvis." And the output should contain "He's alive." Scenario: Viewing today's entries does not print the entire journal # see: https://github.com/jrnl-org/jrnl/issues/741 Given we use the config "simple.yaml" When we run "jrnl -on today" Then the output should not contain "Life is good" And the output should not contain "But I'm better." Scenario Outline: Create entry using day of the week as entry date. Given we use the config "simple.yaml" When we run "jrnl " Then we should see the message "Entry added" When we run "jrnl -1" Then the output should contain "" Then the output should contain the date "" Examples: Days of the week | command | output | date | | Monday: entry on a monday | entry on a monday | monday at 9am | | Tuesday: entry on a tuesday | entry on a tuesday | tuesday at 9am | | Wednesday: entry on a wednesday | entry on a wednesday | wednesday at 9am | | Thursday: entry on a thursday | entry on a thursday | thursday at 9am | | Friday: entry on a friday | entry on a friday | friday at 9am | | Saturday: entry on a saturday | entry on a saturday | saturday at 9am | | Sunday: entry on a sunday | entry on a sunday | sunday at 9am | | sunday: entry on a sunday | entry on a sunday | sunday at 9am | | sUndAy: entry on a sunday | entry on a sunday | sunday at 9am | Scenario Outline: Create entry using day of the week as entry date. Given we use the config "simple.yaml" When we run "jrnl " Then we should see the message "Entry added" When we run "jrnl -1" Then the output should contain "" Then the output should contain the date "" Examples: Days of the week | command | output | date | | Mon: entry on a monday | entry on a monday | monday at 9am | | Tue: entry on a tuesday | entry on a tuesday | tuesday at 9am | | Wed: entry on a wednesday | entry on a wednesday | wednesday at 9am | | Thu: entry on a thursday | entry on a thursday | thursday at 9am | | Fri: entry on a friday | entry on a friday | friday at 9am | | Sat: entry on a saturday | entry on a saturday | saturday at 9am | | Sun: entry on a sunday | entry on a sunday | sunday at 9am | | sun: entry on a sunday | entry on a sunday | sunday at 9am | | sUn: entry on a sunday | entry on a sunday | sunday at 9am | Scenario: Journals with unreadable dates should still be loaded Given we use the config "unreadabledates.yaml" When we run "jrnl -2" Then the output should contain "I've lost track of time." And the output should contain "Time has no meaning." Scenario: Journals with readable dates AND unreadable dates should still contain all data. Given we use the config "mostlyreadabledates.yaml" When we run "jrnl --short" Then the output should be 2019-07-01 14:23 The third entry 2019-07-18 14:23 The first entry 2019-07-19 14:23 The second entry Scenario: Update near-valid dates after journal is edited Given we use the config "mostlyreadabledates.yaml" When we run "jrnl 2222-08-19: I have made it exactly one month into the future." When we run "jrnl -2" Then the output should contain "2019-07-19 14:23 The second entry"