![]() All the same, I do hope these reflections prove useful. I'm sure others are leveraging the power and scriptability of Taskpaper much more thoroughly than I. While the cli editing and reporting options are excellent, I also edit, add notes and tags, change start and stop times etc by opening the file in Taskpaper.Īnyway, that's a few rudimentary ideas. I track my time - work and some other stuff - from the command line using Mr Terpstra's 'doing' script: that it let me keep using my TaskPaper workflow, synced through Dropbox. If ideas start coming too fast and I need to write more expansively in straight up Markdown, I use the Command Palette to temporarily switch the syntax highlighting. Taskmator, a powerful TaskPaper client for iPhone and iPad, has received full. ![]() I also edit and brainstorm in taskpaper files in Sublime using the 'PlainTasks' plugin. Though I just remembered reading somewhere on here that you don't use a mobile phone, perhaps? Can't recall, but if so that last bit is moot. I then ruminate on these ideas away from my computer by reading the taskpaper file using 'Editorial' on the iPhone. If I have an idea for a different project than what I'm working on, I use Alfred to launch into the file for the project, dump the idea and return to work. I have a different taskpaper file for each project. I have clickable links at the top of the file that open the different software I use for a given project (usually Curio, Scrivener, Devonthink, and Sublime Text). Development pace is significantly increased. Some WF features unique, others different, others absent. ![]() Mostly, I use it as a central hub for writing projects – to track story ideas, questions, stuff to fix, changes to track, edit, whatever needs attention. WorkFlowy feature set and available complexity are now broadly at parity with Dynalist/Roam etc, while retaining simplicity if preferred - it's now more down to preference for specific features/workflows/customisation between the apps. That said, I'm not a particularly powerful power-user, as it were. The power of taskpaper for me lies in the format and that it's open source. I use it like a swiss army knife, but oddly enough not for daily todo management. For details about exactly what happens when you sort a taskpaper documents projects and tasks via workflow tags, see the sorting projects by tags and. I avoid going all-in with org-mode because I already have tools that do what I need them to do and they work just fine. I’m very Mac-oriented, especially now that I’m retired and not having to use Windows and Unix machines at work, and I prefer to handle all my lists and logs on the Mac.Ironic I admit Mr Fast, some of your posts have sorely tempted me into the emacs learning curve. When I got home, I imported the remaining few Reminders back into TaskPaper. ![]() Ran around to all the places, checking off items on my iPhone as I made each purchase. Previously, I created Markdown formatted documents written in the Byword editor.Īdded to my workflow in TaskPaper yesterday by exporting a shopping list to Apple Reminders just before leaving the house. Not only that, TaskPaper has taken over as the writing tool I use for my daily personal log. Thanks to post on a new app called Bike by TaskPaper’s developer Hog Bay Software, I discovered TaskPaper, a plain text task manager that works for me. I looked at “ToDo.txt” a long time ago and decided that plain text task managers were not for me and stopped looking. ![]() I’m really curious to know if anyone besides me used the TaskPaper plain text file format today – maybe in the TaskPaper app on your Mac or in any of a number of other apps and text editors that support this open source file format? ![]()
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