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getting date and time difference


lenerd3000

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If this is a timeclock, you'll need to consider just how the hour is broken up. Most companies pay you in 15 minute increments, and they have rules set to determine at what point the current 15 minute block will rollover to the next one. As in, punch in at 3:47 it rounds you to 3:45, but punch in at 3:55 and it rounds you up to 4.

 

Unless of course you want to pay them for exactly the amount of time worked and not round in 15 minute blocks.

rounding up is really my problem. since there is no fixed time for some of the employees. i decided to make a schedule of work as my reference and will be encoded in the database but since they can assign another employee to any time, any day, that will be useless. i work in a call center so there are agents who will be rescheduled on night at this time or day at that time. if i make it to 9 working hours, some can extend to 15hours or how about it is overtime.

That's just short of robbing somebody. No I take it back that's worst.

 

It may not be the most liked practice, but it's fairly typical from what I've seen. Personally I'm not going to make a big deal out of being "robbed" of a few minutes. I just learn the pattern of the time clock and take advantage of it, haha.

 

 

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