taskwarrior-tui
tasks
taskwarrior-tui | tasks | |
---|---|---|
15 | 157 | |
1,334 | 3,278 | |
- | 2.3% | |
6.7 | 9.6 | |
6 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Rust | Kotlin | |
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.
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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.
taskwarrior-tui
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Have a different sort order depending on context
I use two different contexts. One is default, which only shows me the main tasks I want to be working on. In general, this is no more than 10 tasks and excludes things with priority:L or anything +BLOCKED. I have another context, backlog, which shows pretty much everything that default doesn't. Blocked, delayed, de-prioritized tasks. I also use a taskwarrior-tui which lets me switch contexts with a hotkey.
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Private Productivity / Task managers?
I've had great success with using TaskWarrior to manage my tasks. Open-source and terminal-based, though I do use a terminal UI for it, which makes it even more user-friendly.
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I spent 3:27hrs (yes I timed myself) looking for the perfect best to-do list and tried some. They all sucked, since when simplicity became a sin?
If you need a simplistic application to strictly manage tasks that you need to complete, I would recommend TaskWarrior, as well as taskwarrior-tui. Since TaskWarrior is a terminal-based application, taskwarrior-tui provides a nice terminal interface to interact with it.
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Is there a listening mode to Taskwarrior ?
Maybe check out https://kdheepak.com/taskwarrior-tui/
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Taskwarrior
I use `taskwarrior` every day and greatly enjoy it. There's a number of other terminal TODO management solutions that I've dabbled with but `taskwarrior` is just so feature rich and can be adapted to suit your workflow quite easily.
There's also `timewarrior`, which complements `taskwarrior` pretty well.
I'm not affiliated with the `taskwarrior` project, but I wanted to say that if you like the project and are interested in contributing, one way you can do so is by donating to their GitHub sponsors: https://github.com/sponsors/GothenburgBitFactory. For something that I use every day, I don't mind throwing a few bucks their way, and I figured others might feel similarly so I thought I'd share :)
PS - If you are interested in `taskwarrior`, you may also like `taskwarrior-tui`: https://github.com/kdheepak/taskwarrior-tui. It is a terminal user interface for `taskwarrior` that I built in my spare time.
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Do you use any kind of Task Management or to-do app to increase your productivity?
taskwarrior-tui: for quick navigation (and toggle time tracking on and off) https://github.com/kdheepak/taskwarrior-tui
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To do or task management app tip
I combined it with taskwarrior-tui, a TUI (terminal user interface) that makes it even easier to create and manage tasks, and I can never imagine using anything else.
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My TaskWarrior Workflow => The Captain's Log
That's very cool, have you tried taskwarrior-tui?
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Severe need of organizational advice!
And extend functionality/ease of use with Taskwiki + Taskwarrior-tui + Wyrd
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How do you integrate Taskwarrior into your desktop?
I use Material-Shell and just have one of my workspaces dedicated to tasks/notes. So I have Joplin open for note taking, and (like you) a shell where I just have my task list open. I have been experimenting with taskwarrior-tui also.
tasks
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Which todo apps do you use?
I'm curious, did you mean https://tasks.org/ or something else?
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Welche ToDo-App nutzt ihr?
Kalender mit CalDav und der App "Tasks" auf Android
- Tasks.org – Open-Source To-Do Lists and Reminders
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⟳ 4 apps added, 72 updated at f-droid.org
Tasks.org: Open-source To-Do Lists & Reminders (version 13.6): Fork of Astrid Tasks & To-Do List
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Intel 5105 mini-ITX homelab
tasks for Tasks.org mobile
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Starting from the blank canvas, trying to be lazy, and other insights from the 1st week
I thought it was a great idea to find out how certain features are implemented in other people’s projects. I know two open-source apps that are similar to what I want to build: uhabits and tasks.org.
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I feel like I made a mistake investing professionally into Flutter
I think it really depends on what your definition of "productive" is.
Let me try and quantify it. I looked through my apps that I installed from F-Droid, then looked at their GitHub issues and picked one [0]. I bet I could implement that in less than a week with 0 Android development experience.
> Every Android version is basically a reboot in many parts of the framework, the device fragmentation is hardly any better than J2ME days, several features are only documented via samples or Google IO talks, Gradle plugins require rewrites between upgrades, and each Android Studio release is a box of surprises what quirks it has.
Does any of that really matter if you're hiring someone into an existing org? Doesn't Android have amazing backwards compatibility? I'm sure I have some dice app from 2012 that still runs. The company is probably targeting some version of Android and isn't changing to the latest one every time a new version is released.
[0] https://github.com/tasks/tasks/issues/2435
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Tags not syncing with DecSync CC
Edit: and neither do some other features such as 'Filters'. I was aware that some of the features would not sync since that was mentioned in the tasks.org website. But I did not expect this to happen since the website specifically says that tags are synced with DecSync CC.
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Task app for iOS
I just kept bringing up replacing Synology with Nextcloud because of the reminder sync issue and the superior web app. If you don't rely heavily on reminders then its not a huge deal. You can read more about this at https://github.com/tasks/tasks/issues/1802
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Just settled into TickTick
I've been trying out a TON of GTD-related apps over the years and recently settled on tasks.org to complement Google Tasks. Honestly, this is an amazing app, but it lacks features that I really want: A Web interface and integration with other applications. Then a week ago, I moved to Todoist, and while it worked great and provided much of what I wanted, its free account limitations were apparent. Bummer, as I didn't want to pay what they ask for a premium account.
What are some alternatives?
taskwarrior - Taskwarrior - Command line Task Management
nextcloud-deck - 📋 Android client for nextcloud deck app
material-shell - A modern desktop interface for Linux. Improve your user experience and get rid of the anarchy of traditional desktop workflows. Designed to simplify navigation and reduce the need to manipulate windows in order to improve productivity. It's meant to be 100% predictable and bring the benefits of tools coveted by professionals to everyone.
termux-widget - Termux add-on app which adds shortcuts to commands on the home screen.
taskwiki - Proper project management with Taskwarrior in vim.
khal - :calendar: CLI calendar application
vim-notes - Easy note taking in Vim
EteSync Server - The Etebase server (so you can run your own)
qtask - GUI organizer based on Taskwarrior
Kuroba-Experimental - Free and open source image board browser
vimwiki - Personal Wiki for Vim
todo.txt-cli - ☑️ A simple and extensible shell script for managing your todo.txt file.