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Chronoscript

Chronofactorem exists, yes. It helps you easily make your timetable while checking for possible clashes, yes. But is it the timetable that matches your need the most? Maybe, you'd never know for sure.

Depending on the courses you want, and the CDCs you need to take, there can be thousands of possible timetables (psst.. CS 2-2 (2022-23) had over 30,000 timetables).

Going through each of them is a .. not so fun task. Well, to an extent you can now automate this.

Chronoscript currently automates the process of:

  1. Converting the timetable pdf to a csv file.
  2. Converting the csv file to a json file. (used for the chronofactorem website and the timetables script).
  3. Generating all possible timetables with the given set of courses (without class hours or exam timing clashes).
  4. Filters them and sorts them based on your needs. (days you want free, or days you want liter than others).

Note: The first two features are mainly for future developers, and not for users. However, instructions to use those features have been provided as well.

Important information

  1. This is not an official BITS project. We work with the timetable pdf that is made available to all students, and if there are any errors in details/formatting of the timetable, the tool may not work as expected. So, after the timetables are formed, it is advised to verify the timetable of your choice with the official timetable pdf (including exams).

  2. The scripts generate multiple possible/permutations of the timetables which do not have any clashes, it is very compute heavy. This is why it is not going to be incorporated as part of the chronofactorem website as of now, and can only be run locally.

  3. Additionally, it was not built with first-years in mind as your timetables will not have clashes and there are too many to take care of. However we will be working on optimising the code to make it work for first-years as well in the future.

Contributing

  1. We accept feature requests and bug reports as issues on this repository. If you want to contribute code, please open a pull request.

  2. We appreciate any kind of help, be it code, documentation, or even just suggestions. If you want to contribute but don't know where to start, please reach out to any one of us.

System requirements

  1. Python 3.7+, 3.10.11 is recommended. (Download from here, if you don't already have it installed)

  2. Poetry (package manager for python) 1.5.0 is recommended. (Installation instructions for all platforms here)

Quick installation instructions For Linux/MacOS/WSL, run the following command in your terminal:

curl -sSL https://install.python-poetry.org | python3 -

Note: Make sure you add poetry to your path variable as well.

Common issue in adding poetry to path in MacOS

  1. Optional: If you wish to create you timetable form the PDF directly, you will also need the timetable pdf as given by the administration.

Note: Using the updated CSV/JSON file provided in the repository is recommended, as at least some, if not all errors have already been removed. If you wish to create your own CSV/JSON file, follow the instructions in the Generating the CSV file section.

Usage instructions

  1. Clone this repository to your local machine (or) download the zip file and extract it.

  2. cd to the src directory.

  3. Run poetry shell to activate the virtual environment.

  4. Run poetry install to install all the dependencies.

  5. If there are any particular course sections you'd like to avoid, remove them from the json file.

Note: We are currently working on a feature that allows you to do this interactively, but for now you'll have to do it manually.

  1. Open timetables.py and navigate to the bottom of the file.

  2. Modify the CDCs, DELs, OPELs and HUELs variables with the course codes you want (exhaustive) in your timetable.

  3. Choose the number of DELs, OPELs and HUELs you want from these in nDels, nOpels and nHuels respectively. Leave as len(...), if you want to pick all of them for sure.

  4. Modify the free_days variable with the days you want to have free if possible.

  5. Modify the lite_order variable with the relative order of liteness you want to have in your timetable. For example, if my order is

["S", "M", "Su", "F", "T", "W", "Th"]

, then I want to have a timetable with the least number of hours on Saturday, then Monday, then Sunday, and so on.

  1. Run poetry run python timetables.py to generate the timetables.

The console output will show you the rough results of your filters, and the number of timetables generated.

It additionally prints out the timetable that most suits your needs, and the one that matches your minimum requirements but is the furthest from your ideal timetable.

Format: (number of free days matched, [number of hours of classes per day, in order of the lite_order variable], timetable)

Note: This is used only for testing purposes and those who are comfortable with the script. You can visualize them as tables in the next step.

Further instructions

  1. You will now have a my_timetables.json file created.

  2. This can be be visualized as tables using the visualize.py script, by specifying the index of the timetable you want to visualize. (0: most ideal, n-1 or -1: least ideal) (where n denotes number of timetables generated)

  3. Run poetry run python visualize.py to visualize the timetable.

Example outputs

Class schedule: condensed

class sched

Class schedule: expanded

class sched

Midsem schedule

mids sched

Compre schedule

compre sched

Matching your ideal timetable

ideal

Generating the CSV and JSON file

  1. Open converter.py and navigate to the bottom of the file.

  2. Modify the variables as the comments suggest to suit your needs/timetable. (headers, file and page_range)

  3. Run poetry run python converter.py to generate the csv file.

  4. Fix any errors in formatting or course details in the CSV file (see more below in the Fixing errors in the CSV file section).

  5. Open create_json.py and navigate to the bottom of the file.

  6. In the general case, there shouldn't be any need to modify the variables. However, if there is a column reorder in the csv file, you can modify the columns variable to match the order of the columns in the csv file.

  7. Run poetry run python create_json.py to generate the json file.

Fixing errors in the CSV file

In some cases there can be formatting errors/course detail errors are present in the PDF given by the administration. In such cases, the CSV file generated will have errors. We will need to fix these before creating our timetable.json file.

Examples of such errors are:

  1. Formatting errors:

OS

Here, the hours column should ideally just have 13 like the other courses, hence we need to fix this in the generated csv file from "13(8.00p\nm)" to "13".

  1. Course detail errors:

MACRO

Here, the word Tutorial should be in the row below, and the corresponding section should be marked as 1 (latter fix is optional, as script takes care of it). So once again, we need to fix this in the generated csv file.

Features we are working on (in no particular order)

  1. Generating a CLI/TUI that works across all platforms that will let you do this interactively, and not having to modify and src files.

  2. Functionality to balance out the timetables across the week, so that you don't have too many classes on one day and too few on another.

  3. Functionality to sort timetables by exam liteness. (and set priority to exam liteness over class liteness, or vice versa)

  4. (Tentative) Functionality to add any course under a department that follows your filters to satisfy a course requirement.

  5. (Tentative) Working with first-year timetables.

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Scripts to help find your ideal BITS timetable in minutes

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