Hi again Kitus,
Try this:
In the context filter select (all)
Click the checkbox for “Add Advanced” and click the “setup” button
Click “add rule” if necessary
In the first dropdown select “ContextsText”
In the second dropdown select “contains”
In the third box type “@wait” (without the quotes. MLO will add its own quotes)
Click OK
Use the GroupBy button to group by context.
You will see listings for @wait, #john and #james. Each task will appear twice, once in @wait and once in #somebody. Note that if you have other contexts like @waiting that contain “@wait” they will be picked up as well.
Suggestion, if the every entry in @wait also has a #somebody context, you could make life simpler by getting rid of the @wait context and assigning a character like “]” to mean “wait” – then you would have contexts like “]John” and “]James” and your to-do listing would filter on ContextText that starts with ]. One advantage would be that each task would appear only once.
-Dwight
From: mylifeo...@googlegroups.com [mailto:mylifeo...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of kitus
Sent: Sunday, August 19, 2012 6:09 AM
To: mylifeo...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [MLO] Grouping tasks with multiple contexts
Hello again,
I would be glad if anybody could give me a hand with this.
Say I have one "wainting for" task which I want to track.
TASK: Waiting for John to set up a meeting | Contexts: @wait, #John
If I only display tasks with contexts @wait (filtering @wait on the left column), and now I want to group by John, James, etc., how do I do it?
Thanks a lot in advance everyone,
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This is an opportune post – I was going to post something on this very subject.
I have been playing with Trello and it has crystalised a lot of my frustrations with MLO as a planning tool.
MLO is very good for helping me keep focussed and telling me what I should do next but I have always struggled to use it as something to plan my work over the next few days, weeks, months, or years
I have found Trello the complete opposite in this respect – very good for planning; less good for day to day management.
At the moment, I intend to use both but the problem is that there is a large amount of double keying – same things appearing in both products and then there is the problem of keeping the two in synch.
The reason for this post is that I can see way in which MLO could be made more like Trello – using Contexts.
The key feature of Trello is the concept of Lists You can create these with whatever names you wish and they display side by side and you can drag tasks between lists to organise and manage your work. This side by side view is very helpful for seeing where you are overloaded, etc. And is clearly a very popular feature
Contexts are similar but a) there is no side by side view and b) if you have a task that is assigned to more than one Context it appears multiple times in the To Do view – once under each of the Contexts (as described by Dwight)
My proposal is something along the following lines (to solve the second problem and as a starting point). When you create a group on a Context, there is an additional option to a) choose the Contexts which that you want to appear as Groups Headings and b) to manually order these Groups.
ie: you can select the Contexts that appear as Group headings and the order in which they appear.
This would allow us to simulate Lists in MLO using Contexts and the group view:
· You would create a set of contexts which represent your lists (‘List Contexts’)
· You could create a ToDo filter which groups by Context and displays and orders these ‘List Contexts’
For me this would be a big step forward. The next step would be to have a side by side view of the Groups.
I have more to say on this subject (Trello has also crystalised what I want from the Calendar feature too) but this is a starting point.
Richard
Hi, Brienne. What part of the world are you in? Here in the suburbs of New York it’s 62F today, which feels positively chilly after the long stretch of days over 90.
Have you read the GTD book yet? It’s “Getting Things Done” by David Allen, available in many libraries and relatively easy to read. It explains a lot.
The idea of contexts would be that they define an environment in which certain tasks can get done. For example, most of us have tasks that have to be done on the computer, so there’s no point in wasting time thinking about those tasks when you are, for example, out driving around. So you assign the context “computer” to those tasks, and maybe the context “errands” to other tasks that you do while driving. Then you can use a view like “active by context” to quickly check for stuff to do in whatever environment you find yourself. MLO goes further with concepts like the hours a context is open. I try to spend as little time on the computer as possible on Saturday, so my Computer context is closed then – if I look for things that need to be done, the Computer tasks will not show. Also, on my Android, contexts like my home and my mother-in-law’s apartment are associated with a location, so those contexts don’t show up (in the Nearby view) unless that’s where I am.
I think that the at sign (@) at the beginning represents the traditional GTD idea that contexts are generally places. Other leading characters such as # or ! are used mainly to cause the sort to work a certain way. There’s no need for a leading character, you can just say “Home” or whatever, if you like.
All that said, you are free to imagine other uses for contexts that reflect the way you want to organize your work. Kitus is using contact names, at least in his example. That’s an interesting idea but not one I will be using myself. Richard is using contexts as list names, in order to create headings. If you think of something new, please share it with the forum.
-Dwight
If I hit the “contexts” button in RTE I see a list of all of the contexts I have defined, some with prefixes including @, others without. If I enter a new context in the text box, MLO offers to create a context with that name and does not appear to be paying any particular attention to the leading character.
>>>Lisa wrote
You are right, one of the pillars of a productivity system is user customization. What works for your may not work for me and vice-versa. If I have to read something when I'm not at work, that something will have two context. Displaying the task twice causes me to mentally filter one of the tasks... I really think that MLO should enable context management so that one can fit it to their needs.
Let's see what others think. So far some of the users have already indicated here what their opinion is.
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Lisa Stroyan, mailto: ...@gmail.com
I don't know what the best way to fix the problem would be
but I would just like to add that I think it is a problem. Now I sometimes have
to erase the context which I think is less important or just deal seeing items
repeated, which I find quite annoying.
I could see benefits of having a list of contexts that are prioritized with the
first context in the list being the one that's displayed. I think that would be
better than having items coming up multiple times in the same view but could
imagine that it might be hard to set these priorities and that they might
change for different situations.
I also like the idea of having separate lists of contexts that are mutually
exclusive, as in the Trello example described by Richard C. I could imagine
something like that being very useful. Then instead of choosing "group by
Context" you could choose something like, "group by Place
Context" or "group by "Day of the Week Context" and
these would not have repeats. But I guess someone might want an activity to
have multiple places or multiple days of the week, which may create the same
problem as currently exists. However, I'm not sure what type of lists people
would have, but repeats in these customized list examples might not be as much
of a problem as repeats in the current muddled list of contexts. As in, if an
activity was listed as being for Tuesday and Thursday, I think a repeat in list
broken up by days of the week would make sense. In the current system, I have contexts
which are place specific and those are related to other aspects of the activity
(that I use for filtering different views) and now my "Grouped By
Context" lists have @Office: items A, B and C then right below say
something like Research Activities: Items A and C. The repeat is unnecessary
and it really does make the lists hard to read and much longer than they really
are.
As I said, I'm not sure how to fix it but I agree with Kitus that it would be
interesting to see a potential solution from MLO.