** User: Will this function work with the following CREATED property: :CREATED: [2009-07-27 Mon 17:12] ** Ellama: As an AI, I'd need more information to provide a specific answer. The function and the programming language weren't specified. Generally speaking, ":CREATED: [2009-07-27 Mon 17:12]" seems like a timestamp. If the function is designed to work with timestamps, and if the language supports this format, then yes, it will work. If it's a function related to a specific platform like Org-mode in Emacs Lisp, ":CREATED:" might be a special keyword indicating the creation time of some item (like a note or a task), then a function designed to work on such properties should also work. Otherwise, probably it won't work. So it really depends on the context, the function, and the programming language/ platform you are using. ** User: Will this function work with the following CREATED property: :CREATED: [2009-07-27 Mon 17:12] ** Ellama: As an AI, I need more context in order to answer accurately. If you refer to a function in programming, you would need to specify the programming language and the structure of the function, so I could determine whether the date property could be passed into it correctly. For instance, in the Emacs Organizer mode (often used for note-taking, maintaining TODO lists, project planning, and authoring), the :CREATED: property would commonly be used for timestamps. We would need to know the specific function you're asking about to determine its compatibility with this property. If you're referring to a function in a different context (like math, for example), then the concept of a :CREATED: property would not typically be applicable. ** User: here is the function: (defun my/org-refile-header-to-org-roam-dailies-by-created-date () "Move the current org header to the corresponding org-roam-dailies file based on its :CREATED: property." (interactive) (unless (org-at-heading-p) (error "Not at an org heading")) (let* ( ; Get the CREATED property at point and parse it to the proper datetree format (created (org-entry-get (point) "CREATED")) ; Extract the date and ignore the time (date-string (when created (nth 0 (split-string created " ")) ) ) ; Convert the string to a date (date (and date-string (org-read-date nil t date-string)) ) ) (when date (save-excursion (org-cut-subtree) (org-roam-dailies-find-date date) (goto-char (point-max)) (newline) (org-paste-subtree) (save-buffer) ) ) ) (message "Date string: %s, Date: %s" date-string date) ;; (message "Moved header to the corresponding org-roam-dailies file.") ) ** Ellama: This function is written in Emacs Lisp (Elisp) and it's designed to refile headers in Emacs' Org-mode based on the :CREATED: property. The :CREATED: property you provided earlier, :CREATED: [2009-07-27 Mon 17:12] is a right format that can be used with this function. This Elisp function does the following: 1. Check if the point (cursor) is at an Org-mode heading. 2. Retrieve the value of the :CREATED: property of the current heading. 3. Process this value to extract the date (ignoring the time). 4. Use this date to find the correct org-roam-dailies file. 5. Cut the current subtree (the heading and its contents) and paste it into the org-roam-dailies file at the correct date. 6. Save the org-roam-dailies file. 7. Output a message indicating the date string and the formatted date. So in short, yes, the function should work with your :CREATED: property. Ensure org-roam and org-roam-dailies are properly installed and configured, since the function relies on them.