obsidian-wielder
todo.txt-cli
obsidian-wielder | todo.txt-cli | |
---|---|---|
4 | 55 | |
92 | 5,473 | |
- | 0.5% | |
0.0 | 2.9 | |
4 months ago | 2 months ago | |
TypeScript | Shell | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
obsidian-wielder
- Show HN: Obsidian 1.0
-
Show HN: My new free note taking tool
Depending on which particular subject you are interested in:
- The plugin:
https://wielder.victor.earth/Welcome shows the sort of things you can build with Wielder. The github repository for the library is here https://github.com/victorb/obsidian-wielder
- How To Solve it
The key ideas behind How To Solve It are that for a lot of our challenges there are strategies we can use to tackle them effectively. How To Solve It expounds on how to go about understanding a problem, understanding the connection of the data you have with what you don't know, how to make problems more tractable, carrying out a plan, and evaluating the results.
- Untools
A site dedicated to listing various strategies for thinking, communicating and prioritization; they sell templates similar in nature to what I'm building, but I depart sharply from them in my desired document representation choice for templates - Zettlekastian graph continuations for me versus linear documents for them.
- My own tool
This is currently private and not yet ready for public consumption. I have a whole lot of philosophical backing for what I'm trying to build but it is still very far from generating utility at the level I want it too. Later today I'll see about moving some private notes into a blog post going into more depth about what I'm building and why.
- Show HN: Wielder – Write and evaluate Clojure code in your Obsidian documents
todo.txt-cli
-
Ask HN: What products other than Obsidian share the file over app philosophy?
FSNotes for macOS and iOS is one I used for a little while.
https://fsnot.es/
todo.txt is another thing that comes to mind.
http://todotxt.org/
And of course pretty much all of *nix.
-
My productivity app is a never-ending .txt file
Since at least 2012 I've also been using a text file format from http://todotxt.org/ and more recently I wrote a program that takes a crontab-like list to pre-generate entries on a daily, by-day-name (every Sunday for example), and I also pull in a list of holidays from gov.uk, so they are also populated.
[^1]: (https://github.com/blacksmithgu/obsidian-dataview)
- Why I Like Obsidian
-
Ask HN: Tell us about your project that's not done yet but you want feedback on
It's a web app implementing the todo.txt format (see http://todotxt.org/). It's an exercise to learn frontend currently, I doubt I could successfully monetize it. Would appreciate any feedback!
-
Looking for a note taking app with inline tags.
That format is really similar to todo.txt format, worth taking a look at http://todotxt.org/ (which in turn has application links).
-
Using Acme with Inferno's Shell as a pkm tool
For todo and schedule I use todo.txt (http://todotxt.org/) a plain file managed by scripts which build agenda and plumber to keep track of unique keys.
-
Looking for PC and mobile "to do list" software
The ToDo.Txt format makes it easy to use across devices/software, but this is really limited to ToDos.
-
Yet another To Do manager written in BASH. Simple and colorful.
Here’s the todo.sh features for those interested. There are several addons for it as well: https://github.com/todotxt/todo.txt-cli
-
TaskTXT The Todo List for Hackers
Good idea, something similar to todotxt.org. But no 1) iPhone app 2) you need to sigh up and keep your notes at developers servers 3) subscriptions?! come on!
-
Wish to start cli apps development
There are a couple different routes you can go down. If your goal is to learn CLI stuff, it's hard to beat using shell-scripting for a simple app like a todo manager. Storing them in a plain-text file, a little sed/grep/awk and you're well on your way. For inspiration & hints, you might check out https://todotxt.org However, you can rapidly hit performance issues and limitations on available tooling if you stick to just POSIX tools.
What are some alternatives?
voiceliner - Braindump better.
taskpaper.vim - This package contains a syntax file and a file-type plugin for the simple format used by the TaskPaper application.
dev - Development repository for the CodeMirror editor project
taskwarrior - Taskwarrior - Command line Task Management
Perlite - A web-based markdown viewer optimized for Obsidian
org-caldav - Caldav sync for Emacs orgmode
PineDocs - A fast and lightweight site for viewing files
MarvinAPI - API documentation for the Amazing Marvin productivity tool
til - :memo: Today I Learned
github-orgmode-tests - This is a test project where you can explore how github interprets Org-mode files
dev - Press the . key on any repo
vimwiki - Personal Wiki for Vim