![]() So one entry might be “ #call I click on #call I can see everyone I should call, including Amanda.Īnd right before I speak to amanda I click and boom, I get the full history of when I spoke to Amanda in the simple calendar function I run in the outliner - because every time we’ve spoken in the past, I’ve made a brief note and tagged it it seems you are using and # in a more expansive sophisticated way. So in the past (yeah yeah I’m all Stockholm syndromed from WF) I’ve used for people. Hey while we’re here, can I bend your ear about something else - cuz this brings up another point as to how you are using these different hashtag types. Super cool, really appreciate the thoughtful kind answer. We originally got this idea from TaskPaper, after a user suggested it. Of course, this is just my current thoughts, could change anytime in the future. There could be workarounds, just like how people work around dates in WorkFlowy, but it’s different than being supported natively, just like it would take a crazy WorkFlowy extension to sync those custom dates to Google Calendar. I know you can workaround with “!!!”, but it harder to work around some other cases, like tracking time with or assign tasks with vs With plain tags, it can be hard to search for items that are assigned to amanda without seeing stuff that are assigned by amanda, unless you add specialized tags for both ( #assigned_by_amanda and #assigned_to_amanda). It’s super flexible for quantitative data. ![]() You can just pretend it doesn’t exist and it won’t affect you one bit (at least we hope we can make it so). It does not bother people who don’t use it, at all, unlike the four menus that you never use in Photoshop.Two reasons why I think this is worth it: I’m all for functionality, and if it helps people thats fantastic, but I wonder if its a really big hammer for this nut?
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |