Leslie
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744 votes
I see what you are referring to now. Like the outline feature, we will not able to implement this until Toodledo implements an interface allowing access for apps such as ours.
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125 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Leslie commentedTouche! IF Ultimate To-Do List had this functionality it would crush the competition without it, the competition crushes them, because it's such an intuitive part of an app like this. Something like Check Mark's All in One Calendar interface would do the trick. For the time being there is a widget that has Monthly and daily views (2 different widgets), but they're just widgets, though I've found it to be helpful in this regard. Check out Pure Calendar and Pure Grid Calendar. It's not a full blow interface, however it kinda fills in the gap, where Ultimate to-do List left off.
Leslie supported this idea ·
Yes! This would be awesome...but this app is powerful enough for you to do this yourself, if you really wanted to. This is basically what I did:
I created a task with each grocery item I buy.
For each task I assigned it to a folder called "Lists.Groceries"
I created all of them with no completion date.
THEN I create a view under "My Views" called "Grocery List", with the following filters:
1. Folder = "Lists.Groceries"
2. Completed tasks
Boom! There's my master list of groceries!
THEN I created another list under "My Lists" called: "Grocery Shopping", with the following filters:
1. Folder = "Lists.Groceries"
2. NOT completed
NOW to use it, I go to my "Grocery Shopping" view under "My View". Everything I DON'T want I mark for completion. Now I have my Grocery Shopping List!
If I want to add something to my Grocery Shopping view, I go to my view called "Grocery List" which has all the completed grocery list items in it. Then anything I want to add to my Grocery Shopping view, I uncheck. That automatically moves it to my view called: "Grocery Shopping". It's really simple!
If you shop at different places for different things, you can also add a context for the location. For example, the things I buy at Costco, I created a context called @Costco. All the items I buy at Costco are assigned the @Costco context. Everything else I buy at Fry's. So if you really wanted to take it to the next level, you could make a View (under My Views" called: Costco with all the items you buy at Costco (Filtered by: Folder = "List.Groceries", Task not completed, Context = @Costco). And have a second grocery shopping view called: "Fry's" and Filter the view by Folder = "Lists.Groceries", Task = not completed and no context (or call it Frys).
IF that doesn't make sense...sorry...lol...but the developers probably follow what I just explained.