5/29/2023 0 Comments Taskpaper review![]() Remember that I was looking for a way to use TaskPaper when I'm away from my Mac (never a happy time of the day for me). There are a few other keyboard shortcuts: ctrl+up to move an item up ctrl+y to add the tag ctrl+ to add an tag and if you prefer keyboard shortcuts to ':' at a line end, ctrl+p to start a new project and ctrl+t instead of '-' at the start of a new line to add a new task.Īlt+o brings up a document outline, showing a list of all your projects or your tags (you choose which from a pull-down menu) down the left side of the window:Īnother brilliant feature: you can tap ctrl+space from anywhere in Windows to bring up a quick entry box, from which you can add items to any of your projects. ![]() Of course, you might prefer to simply delete done tasks, but I like seeing what I've completed - and by clicking anwhere in the line and then using ctrl+down, you can move the completed task to the bottom of the list. Click in the checkbox to the left of an item and TodoPaper adds and the date, and makes the font strikeout: The are clickable - so clicking brings up a list of all my tasks with that tag, across all of my projects. one task another task yet another task TodoPaper turns your text into the following list: The two programs are, in fact very similar, especially when you compare TodoPaper to the recent development versions of TaskPaper.īoth are really sophisticated envelopes for plain text files. What I've done in the past is to use the portable version of Notepad++, which is a fine solution and does the job perfectly well, but really only to a minimum of usability when you compare with what's possible in TaskPaper.Īnd then along came TodoPaper ($29.99, ), which bills itself as inspired by TaskPaper. There's something about plain text that I find so appealing.īut since I work on a Mac at home and on PCs during the day, I've searched for the best way to carry my lists. But now and then I have opened TaskPaper, updated my lists, downloaded the latest development version, and every time I've done this I've breathed a sigh of pleasure and relief. I played for a few months with RTM, again, and then settled to paper and my trusty, familiar old Moleskine pocket notebook (the same one I've carried everywhere for the past three years). The truth is that since then I've fallen once again into my old habit of tweaking the tool and not doing the necessary. 150 beautiful fonts are available.A while back, I wrote a review of TaskPaper over on ( ). Customize extended keyboard keys, themes, dark mode, fonts, colors.Review all your projects using "Go to Project." feature.TextExpander (TETouch Snippet Expansion) support.UI elements respond to the cursor on iPadOS when connecting a mouse or trackpad.Drag & Drop items from another app and vice versa. Organize notes, tasks, or projects by tags.Colored Tags, Tags Suggestion, Links Detections, Tag Formatting.Multiple Window, Split View Support for iPadOS.Type your lists into Taskmator and each line is quickly formatted into a Project, Task, or Note. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |