First, thanks for a great feature. Definitely valuable.
I often schedule emails to send for when I specifically won't be on my
computer. When I go to check sent emails, it's usually several hours or a day
later or several days later and if the date didn't parse correctly, my response
to a conversation is now late (or mistimed).
To know how my date will be parsed ahead of time, I have to go test my date in
Testing Resources (more time wasted than just typing the date in standard long
format). So my own solution for now is to memorize and use the standard long
format. But I really like the flexibility of more casual date descriptions,
especially when typing a trigger on my mobile (switching keyboards for symbols
is cumbersome).
Solution 1: I can train myself to be better at knowing the correct form of more
short parseable date formats. But mistakes are still possible.
Solution 2: Build something like the "Parse Date" feature in "Testing
Resources" into the draft writing or draft checking workflow.
Solution 3: When the script runs and finds a draft email with the trigger, it
replaces the user-entered date text with script-generated date text in a
standard long format.
The user can check drafts to see that dates parsed correctly, can revise the
date, can revise the draft, etc. without any new steps in the original writing
process (ie new dialogs, new clicks, confirmations, etc)
Further, the script add a label or subj text that would highlight drafts that
have been modified by the script. Currently, delay-send drafts and plain old
drafts are mixed together so it's more difficult to go find the ones you want
to double-check for correctly parsed dates.
Original issue reported on code.google.com by cant...@gmail.com on 17 Sep 2014 at 2:25
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
cant...@gmail.com
on 17 Sep 2014 at 2:25