John Hendy <jw.he...@gmail.com> writes:

> On Mon, Jan 23, 2012 at 3:00 AM, Eric S Fraga <e.fr...@ucl.ac.uk> wrote:

[...]

>> In terms of the original questions, I use a combination of hierarchical
>> structure that is filled in as a project develops, with
>> revision control to allow me to see progress, together with a log based
>> recording of activities (e.g. meetings, deliverables delivered, issues
>> raised).  That is, I mix both of the approaches mentioned by John in his
>> initial email.
>>
>
> This is intriguing. I don't suppose you have a sample file of sorts?
> Specifically, I'm interested in how you mix 'n match
> hierarchical/topical vs. time-based organization. I really struggle

I may have mislead you; I do not mix 'n match in a single org file.  A
project file will have various entries as required (meeting notes,
todos, actual code, whatever) but the time logging is completely
separate.  I log all my activities and each entry simply indicates the
particular project I am working on (or whatever, like reading emails
;-).  The logging is in a standalone file, imaginatively called log.org.

Likewise, general GTD stuff also goes into separate files: tasks.org,
diary.org.

So maybe not what you want after all...

[...]

> Also, I'm a super git newb. The furthest I've gotten to is setting up

I can't help you here.  I'm also a n00b when it comes to git.  I use it
pretty much like you for org related stuff: to keep various systems in
sync.

-- 
: Eric S Fraga (GnuPG: 0xC89193D8FFFCF67D) in Emacs 24.0.92.1
: using Org-mode version 7.8.03 (release_7.8.03.283.g171ea)


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