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I am new, just checking the tool out a bit, and probably not really the typical user, so all can be taken with a grain of salt. But. It seems there's a bit of a conflict if ontime is going to
One (bad) solution would be to assume that all times are expressed relative to the same midnight. If a user wants an event to start the next day, they would need to enter it as e.g., There's a separate but related question how to think about "overlaps." For me if Start2 is before Start1, that's not an "overlap," that's a "Events out of order." That is, in your examples above:
But of course, sometimes what I called "Events out of order" is clearly actually a case of event starting the next day
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We want to improve Ontime's ability to infer scheduling from the rundown.
Specifically, how do we know that an event is the day after?
The problem
Consider the following
We typically say that the
Event 2
inExample 1
is the day afterWhile we can infer that in
Example 2
, there is an overlap of 5 minutesIt seems that we instinctively do it because the distance in
Example 1
is considerable while it is small inExample 2
.However, I can't find a hard rule for what should be classified as an overlap and what is the day after.
For a more complicated case:
Is this day after or has a 30min overlap?
Going forwards
Ontime does not have a concept of days, all times are milliseconds from midnight.
Currently, we consider that your rundown is in order. With this, we infer:
However, this is opinionated, and we could be giving incorrect feedback to the user.
I appreciate any thoughts on how to improve the feature in Ontime.
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