Track time beautifully.
BSD-3-CLAUSE License
Track time beautifully.
Timecard allows you to track how much time you spend on tasks. It offers a clean, responsive one-window interface that allows you to quickly configure your time tracking, and then hides away in the system tray until you need it again.
This can be installed a number of ways.
You can install directly via pip
using the following command:
pip install Timecard-App
If you're installing outside of a virtual environment, use the following:
pip install --user Timecard-App
Then, you can start the program with just:
timecard-app
Using Timecard is simple!
If you close the window, Timecard will stay running in the system tray. Click the system tray icon and press "Show/Hide Window" to restore the window.
To quit, press the Quit button on the lower-right corner of the window, and then press "Quit" at the prompt. If there is no time running or pending save, you can also click "Quit" from the system tray icon menu.
Timecard 1.0 was the first application ever released by developer and author Jason C. McDonald, built in Visual Basic .NET 2010, and released through the then newly founded MousePaw Games.
This is a resurrection of that project. It offers the same core functionality as the original, but in an improved interface. Unlike its predecessor, Timecard 2 is portable and completely open source.
Like what you see? Sponsor me on GitHub or Buy Me A Coffee!.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome via GitHub!
Timecard 2 is licensed under the BSD-3-Clause license (see LICENSE
).