On Aug 2, 2007, at 14:13, Egli Christian (KIRO 41) wrote:
What I do is that I schedule the tasks that I want to do on a
particular
day. I also customize the agenda to show unscheduled TODOs, so my
(weekly) agenda shows me the tasks that haven't been scheduled
(probably
not so important, a MA
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Behalf Of Piotr Zielinski
Sent: Wednesday, August 01, 2007 5:24 PM
To: Jason F. McBrayer
Cc: emacs-orgmode@gnu.org
Subject: Re: [Orgmode] Interpretation of priorities in org-mode
> > If something has to be done
On 01/08/07, Jason F. McBrayer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't really use priorities at all, since I'm using org-mode to do
> GTD.
I agree with you on that, I was only suggesting using priorities as a
technical means to label certain tasks as "to do today" in a way which
is easy in org-mode.
"Piotr Zielinski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'd like to find out how different people use priorities (#A, #B, ...)
> in org-mode. I've always assumed the standard interpretation (#A =
> high priority, #B = medium, #C = low). However, the problem with this
> approach is that what "high priori
Hi Piotr,
"Piotr Zielinski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've been recently experimenting with a different interpretation of
> priorities: #B = tasks to do today, #C = tasks to do this week, #D =
> all the rest, default. #A is reserved at the moment. One good thing
> about this system is a clear