> Michal Nazarewicz <mina86@mina86.com> writes: >> IMO this is totally unintuitive and not how the range should work. >> date:foo..bar should return messages whose date >= foo and < bar. So >> for instance date:november..yesterday should return messages whose date >> is > 2012/11/01 00:00:00 and < 2012/09/12 00:00:00. So to get >> yesterdays messages one would do: date:yesterday..today. On Thu, Sep 13 2012, David Bremner wrote: > I don't find ranges being half-open by default to be very > intuitive. Perhaps I don't program in python enough. Perhaps C than: “for (i = 0; i < 10; ++i)” is the standard idiom and the end range is open. Let's take a look at: date:2012/01/01..2012/01/01 + 1 day in my opinion, that should give results from the first of January only, since “+ 1 day” indicates in a way how long user want the period to be. I think it's also easier to pragmatically create ranges. For instance, let's say you want to create ranges for each week, you'd end up with: date:2012/01/02..2012/01/09 ## 2012w01 date:2012/01/09..2012/01/16 ## 2012w02 date:2012/01/16..2012/01/23 ## 2012w03 Notice how the opening date of a range matches the closing date of the previous date. -- Best regards, _ _ .o. | Liege of Serenely Enlightened Majesty of o' \,=./ `o ..o | Computer Science, Michał “mina86” Nazarewicz (o o) ooo +----<email/xmpp: mpn@google.com>--------------ooO--(_)--Ooo--