#1
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Getting Things Done Template 1.1, by Wil Ussery
I have uploaded a templated based on David Allen's Getting Things Done methodology to the forum. Any feedback would be appreciated.
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#2
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This is very interesting. I downloaded it and am going to see how I can include the concept into my UR file. I love the fact that the dB/Method was well documented.
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#3
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What the purpose of having "due date" and "needed by" date? Isn't it the same thing? Why use one for delegated tasks and another for tasks assigned to oneself? When I see stuff like this I am reminded of how wonderful a program like zoot is for this sort of thing. What you really want is for actions to happen when you drag an item to a given folder. For example marking something as completed and assigning a completed on date should happen just by dragging it to the completed folders.
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#4
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Quote:
The purpose of the Needed By Date is to separate those tasks, which are delegated from the Due Date Tasks, which are specifically tasks that YOU are responsible for. The workflow that you would like to see, needs to be brought to the attention of Kinook as an enhancement request. This is the only way the product will get better. We must be patient, as Ultra Recall is a relatively new program. The functionality that you describe above is available in Ecco Pro. I would like to see some Calendar Functionality in the next version of UR, with User Designed Data Forms and saved VIEWS. |
#5
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Did you ever get your searches to work? I tried incorporating this method into my own files. I started with the Next Actions and children whose names start with @. I then created a search for parent whose name start with @ etc but nothing seems to pick up on that stuff I place in these folders. I then went to your template and tried the same thing and the searches don't work either.
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#6
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#7
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#8
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When I switch to keywords and use @* it thinks everything in my dB starts wit that string. I am not filtering on any dates in my testing. Not sure how keywords are supposed to interpret "@*". I suspect the search code is pretty messed up.
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#9
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#10
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If you pull out the "and due date ...." does it still work as expected?
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#11
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Currently the @ character is not recognized as an initial character of a keyword, so no keywords will be stored with a leading @ character. Since no (auto-generated) keywords will ever start with a @ character, Ultra Recall ignores it in your search criteria, so your search criteria is actually *.
When a Quick Search criteria uses a wildcard symbol (*, ?, [ or ]), Ultra Recall basically does a Matches Wildcard type search for you behind the scenes (searching all string Attributes and keywords). In your case, since the @ will currently never exist in (auto-generated) keywords, Ultra Recall ignores it. The resulting * search (of keywords), which will obviously find all Info Items. The workaround for now (actually it isn't so much a workaround as a more specific search) is to change your search to be an Advanced Search with a criteria of Item Title matches wildcard @* . This should work as expected. We can change Ultra Recall to allow the @ character at the beginning of keywords which will make these searches work as expected on keywords as well... |
#12
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#13
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As far as I can tell a wildcard search of @* for the parents title does no work. Could somebody at kinook confirm or deny this?
Thanks |
#14
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I'm not sure what you mean by 'parents title', but this works here:
1) Create a new database 2) Rename the Notes item to @Notes 3) Configure the Advanced Search item to be Item Title matches wildcard @* and start the search 4) It finds one result, the @Notes item |
#15
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Works for me to. Now try doing the same search but looks for "parent title" make sure you have children of stuff that has names starting with @.
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