> Are there instructions somewhere that describe how to use the "Task"
> function? I find it baffling, illogical, and nearly incomprehensible.
I think it would be easiest, if you could just say what your problems
are with the task functionality, what you would like to see and what
you are trying to achieve. That could open up a discussion which
everyone
could benefit from.
Simon
--
Thunderbird/Calendar Localisation (L10n) Coordinator
Thunderbird l10n blog: http://thunderbird-l10n.blogspot.com
Calendar website maintainer: http://www.mozilla.org/projects/calendar
Calendar developer blog: http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/calendar
1. The payment of the rent is one example of a recurring task that is
never really �completed�. I�ve set up all recurring tasks the same way
and mark them complete the same way yet some, when marked completed,
simply disappear.
2. The ones that don�t disappear eventually appear in due �Today� or
�Next Seven Days� with lines through them. This is very confusing but
apparently means that the previous interim due date has been met.
However, the date in the �Completed� column is (sometimes) not the last
completion date but one before that.
3. When a recurring due date is missed, it does not appear anywhere.
The next due date eventually shows up in �Today� or �Next Seven Days�.
Is this the Task hierarchy:
1. All tasks are either �complete� or �incomplete�
2. All �incomplete� tasks are either �overdue� or �not started� (could
be both?)
3. All �not started� tasks are either eventually due �today� or �next
seven days�
4. Question: Why isn�t an overdue task due �today�? Why have �overdue�
when simply marking (color, font, etc.) the overdue tasks in �today�
would present one less place to look?
5. Question: Where does a missed (or incomplete?) interim due date of a
recurring task fit in?
1. The payment of the rent is one example of a recurring task that is
never really �completed�. I�ve set up all recurring tasks the same way
and mark them complete the same way yet some, when marked completed,
simply disappear.
2. The ones that don�t disappear eventually appear in due �Today� or
�Next Seven Days� with lines through them. This is very confusing but
apparently means that the previous interim due date has been met.
However, the date in the �Completed� column is (sometimes) not the last
completion date but one before that.
3. Two that were set up yesterday and the first due date completed
yesterday still show as �incomplete� and �overdue� and �not started�
4. When a recurring due date is missed, it does not appear anywhere.
The next due date shows up in �Today� or �Next Seven Days�.
Is this the Task hierarchy:
1. All tasks are either �complete� or �incomplete�
2. All �incomplete� tasks are either �overdue� or �not started� (could
be both?)
3. All �not started� tasks are either due eventually �today� or �next
> Simon Paquet wrote:
>> Bill Starrett wrote on 30. Dec 2009:
>>
>>> Are there instructions somewhere that describe how to use the "Task"
>>> function? I find it baffling, illogical, and nearly incomprehensible.
>>
>> I think it would be easiest, if you could just say what your problems
>> are with the task functionality, what you would like to see and what
>> you are trying to achieve. That could open up a discussion which
>> everyone could benefit from.
>>
>> Simon
>>
> Issues with recurring tasks:
>
> 1. The payment of the rent is one example of a recurring task that is
> never really “completed”. I’ve set up all recurring tasks the same way
> and mark them complete the same way yet some, when marked completed,
> simply disappear.
> 2. The ones that don’t disappear eventually appear in due “Today” or
> “Next Seven Days” with lines through them. This is very confusing but
> apparently means that the previous interim due date has been met.
> However, the date in the “Completed” column is (sometimes) not the last
> completion date but one before that.
> 3. Two that were set up yesterday and the first due date completed
> yesterday still show as “incomplete” and “overdue” and “not started” 4.
> When a recurring due date is missed, it does not appear anywhere. The
> next due date shows up in “Today” or “Next Seven Days”.
>
> Is this the Task hierarchy:
>
> 1. All tasks are either “complete” or “incomplete” 2. All
“incomplete”
> tasks are either “overdue” or “not started” (could be both?)
> 3. All “not started” tasks are either due eventually “today” or “next
> seven days”
> 4. Question: Why isn’t an overdue task due “today”? Why have
“overdue”
> when simply marking (color, font, etc.) the overdue tasks in “today”
> would present one less place to look? 5. Question: Where does a
missed
> (or incomplete?) interim due date of a recurring task fit in?
I used events instead of tasks, because it worked for me, but since I've
updated TB to TB 3.0, Lightning is broken until a new 64-bit extension
evolves. I plan on switching to another email client that includes a
calendar.
Good Luck!
--
openSUSE 11.2x86_64 (Gnome 2.28.0) | AMD Athlon(tm) 64 3000+ | 2GB RAM
http://www.mozilla.org/projects/calendar/lightning/download.html#nightly
It is too bad that Lightning could not be ready when TB 3.0 was
released. A lot of people will be put off by having to use the beta.
I recommend to use the release candidate of Lightning 1.0b1 instead of
the nightly test builds. You can download it from
<http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/calendar/2009/12/lightning_10beta1_release_cand.html>
This all comes down to the same issue: Currently the task list doesn't
really support displaying and editing of recurring tasks. They behave
like non-recurring tasks, causing different problems like the mentioned
above.
That won't work for me. Quote from the site you referenced:
"What is missing right now are two things:
* Linux builds for the x86-64 platform. We need someone from the
community to provide those to us. Please contact our lead developer
Philipp Kewisch (contact details are available here) if you can help out.
* Sunbird builds. We still have problems with those but hope tho have
those fixed before Christmas. Watch this space for more information."
A user contributed Linux build for the x86-64 platform is available from
the link posted in the comments right below the blog post:
<http://www.wg9s.com/mozilla/lightning/releases/1.0b1rc1/linux-x86_64/>.
Don't know if it matches your system.
I recommend to use the release candidate of Lightning 1.0b1 instead of the nightly test builds. You can download it from <http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/calendar/2009/12/lightning_10beta1_release_cand.html>
That one did not, but if you drill down into the en_US folder:
http://www.wg9s.com/mozilla/lightning/releases/1.0b1rc1/linux-x86_64/en-
US/
This one works! Thanks! I still think it should be part of the
application and not an add on.
So after looking around for a good FOSS GTD (Getting Things Done)
task/project manager, I just recently started playing with ThinkingRock.
I think it's going to work well for managing my tasks and projects, but
what's better yet is that whenever I have a firmly-scheduled task in TR,
it gets automatically written out to an .ics iCalendar file. In
TB+Lightning, I've added the .ics file as one of my (read-only)
calendars and configured Lightning to refresh the calendars every 10
minutes.
So now, all of my scheduled appointments show up in one spot, which is
important to me, and I've also now got the ability to manage my
workload, including recurring tasks.
So far it's working well for me and I thought I'd share.
Now if I can just figure out how to get ThinkingRock to work from within
the same window as TB... (Hey, maybe as a tab in the new TB3!) :-)
--
-----------------------
Chad Neeper
Senior Systems Engineer
Level 9 Networks
740-548-8070 (voice)
866-214-6607 (fax)
-- Full LAN/WAN consulting services --
-- Specialized in libraries and schools --