- if an endtime leads to a duration biger the the difference between day-start and -end, the day-end from the user prefs are ignored, else it would never find a free time
- using one selectbox for the duration with an extra item 'use enddate', to be more intuitive about duration or enddate is used
- selecting a fitting search-frame for new searches, not just one week
again. I've also implimented more of rfc2445.
I will continue to beat these classes into shape as I add more ical stuff
and document what I have reverse engineered.
Once I am satisfied that this is stable and production worthy I will probably
backport this to the 1.0 branch. My casual testing has shown that this for
the most part works as expected. I also plan on developing test harnesses
for ical import/export.
- for existing events, the own event is now excluded from the busy-time
- a warning is given, if the freetime search is called for a recuring event: Only the initial date of that recuring event is checked!
If you are invited to a private event, you get full access to it, as you would if it were not private. Only restriction is: other people you gave access to your private events, still cant read the event, as long as they have no direct private grant from the owner of the event.
If you are invited to a private event, you get full access to it, as you would if it were not private. Only restriction is: other people you gave access to your private events, still cant read the event, as long as they have no direct private grant from the owner of the event.
let alone view the event details. invitees are now allowed to view the event
details as well as accept their invitation to the event.
NB:
- if an invitee has granted another user private access to the invitee's calendar, the user
to which private access has been granted is UNABLE to view the details of the event.
- if the person who created the event and marked the event private has granted another user
access to that person's private events, then the person granted private access WILL be able
to see the details of the event.
- at most, uninvited third parties will only see that a private event is taking place at some
time, but only if they have at least read access to the calendar of one of the people invited
to the event.
I hope this makes sense. I've tested this extensively to make sure I am not accidently granting
access to private events that should be kept private.