* Re: Use-case: simple nodes and todo-list
2020-10-09 8:17 Use-case: simple nodes and todo-list c.buhtz
@ 2020-10-09 8:37 ` Robert Pluim
2020-10-09 9:30 ` Joost Kremers
2020-10-09 12:53 ` Eric S Fraga
2 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Robert Pluim @ 2020-10-09 8:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: c.buhtz; +Cc: Emacs-orgmode
>>>>> On Fri, 09 Oct 2020 10:17:56 +0200, c.buhtz@posteo.jp said:
c> Hello,
c> I still read something about org-mode.
c> It is a complex and powerfull tool. I now try fit/transform my current
c> workflow and use-cases to org-mode. So maybe you can give me a simple
c> yes-now if this could be fullfilled with org-mode.
c> 1. Simple notes with keywords and endless time to life
Yes. org *allows* you to invent a complex deadline/scheduling
workflow, but at its most basic you just write:
* Project 1 :work:
** Task 1
** Task 2
* Project 2 :play:
and just stick your notes in there (you can do things with lists,
checkboxes, etc, but Iʼd start simple).
c> I have notes (most of them as post-its on the wall and monitor in my
c> office) with information's I am not able or willing to remember. But I
c> need this information's every few days. e.g. numbers for bank-account,
c> projects, persons
c> I find this information's by place (post-it glued to a specific place
c> in my office). When they are digitized I would use keywords or in-text
c> search. e.g. searching for the project name "my project" to find its
c> number.
Everyone has their own system, but I put "stuff I donʼt need often" in
one org file, then I have a 'work' file and a 'play' file. Ordinary
emacs search commands are enough, but again org has support for
searching by tags, name etc.
c> 2.ToDo List without time information's
c> Currently I use a one-page-paper handwritten as a ToDo List. I
c> re-create it every week. It helps me. I make priorities with some
c> colors or underlines. And it (maybe) makes my workload visible to my
c> leaders when sitting in a meeting and having the ToDo list on the
c> table. ;)
c> In the past I also tried "taskwarrior". Very powerfull, I loved
c> it. But it did not fit to my workflow. I know this is apocalyptic and
c> hard to imagine but deadlines are useless in my workflow. :D So
c> taskwarrior did not helped be it just build up more pressure to
c> me. Simple explanation: My work is influenced by to much unknown
c> external spontaneous factors. It is useless to make
c> plans/deadlines. Yes it is horror, I work on it. But I am not on that
c> level of the hierarchy to make the fundamental needed changes.
* TODO get milk :housekeeping:
* TODO feed cat :housekeeping:pets:
(and the 'housekeeping' stuff is also completely optional).
For priorities org has support for 3 levels of priority built in, so
you'd have:
* TODO [#B] get milk :housekeeping:
* TODO [#A] feed cat :housekeeping:pets:
There are convenient key bindings for setting the priorites on items.
For what you've described, Iʼd start by reading (info "(org) TODO
Items"), and stopping when you've reached the level you want to use.
Robert
--
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Use-case: simple nodes and todo-list
2020-10-09 8:17 Use-case: simple nodes and todo-list c.buhtz
2020-10-09 8:37 ` Robert Pluim
@ 2020-10-09 9:30 ` Joost Kremers
2020-10-09 12:53 ` Eric S Fraga
2 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Joost Kremers @ 2020-10-09 9:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: c.buhtz; +Cc: emacs-orgmode
Hi,
On Fri, Oct 09 2020, c.buhtz@posteo.jp wrote:
> 1. Simple notes with keywords and endless time to life
> I have notes (most of them as post-its on the wall and monitor
> in my
> office) with information's I am not able or willing to remember.
> But I
> need this information's every few days. e.g. numbers for
> bank-account,
> projects, persons
> I find this information's by place (post-it glued to a specific
> place in
> my office). When they are digitized I would use keywords or
> in-text
> search. e.g. searching for the project name "my project" to find
> its
> number.
Yes, Org can definitely do this, though in this particular case,
I'm not sure Org really has any advantage over using just plain
text files or say markdown files. (The advantage of Org would be
in the integration that would be possible with other parts of your
setup.)
I personally have something similar: a bunch of files in which I
keep notes of things I may need in the future. I keep them in Org
format and I search them with Deft:
<https://jblevins.org/projects/deft/>. (Though I do not follow the
advice on that page of using Melpa Stable. I just use the Melpa
version.) Of course, searching them can also be done with grep (or
one of its alternatives, ripgrep, ag, etc.) and an Emacs frontend
(ivy, helm, what have you).
> 2.ToDo List without time information's
Yes, you can create todo-lists without time information. You can
attach a deadline to a task, but you don't have to. You can also
create multiple TODO-states (e.g., TODO, INPROGRESS, SUSPENDED,
DONE, etc.) and set different priorities.
--
Joost Kremers
Life has its moments
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread
* Re: Use-case: simple nodes and todo-list
2020-10-09 8:17 Use-case: simple nodes and todo-list c.buhtz
2020-10-09 8:37 ` Robert Pluim
2020-10-09 9:30 ` Joost Kremers
@ 2020-10-09 12:53 ` Eric S Fraga
2 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Eric S Fraga @ 2020-10-09 12:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: c.buhtz; +Cc: Emacs-orgmode
My use of org actually quite closely manages your paper based
approach. I have 3 main org files that cover the tasks you have
described:
1. todo.org which has all my todo items. every now and again, I go
through this list and schedule some of them. I do put deadlines on
items if they have hard deadlines (i.e. of the type that says "this
*has* to be done by then or else...") but I do not create artificial
deadlines.
2. notes.org that is simple a collection of (a large number of)
snippets, each in a single top level headline. These are all tagged
when created with as many tags per entry as I can think of at the
time. I can then usually find what I want very quickly through the
tag search functionality in org-agenda (C-c a m TAG RET) with
org-agenda bound to "C-c a". But see below.
3. diary.org for appointments and meetings. This is the file that sees
the most activity but only because I seem to live in meetings these
days...
The key with the first two is to not worry about how you structure
information. If all else fails, you can use the full power of Emacs to
find things (occur; isearch-forward-regexp; etc.).
HTH,
eric
--
: Eric S Fraga via Emacs 28.0.50, Org release_9.4-38-g16f505
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