mind follows the following philosophy
A productive mind has an empty stack.
Explaination:
Sometimes we have too much on our mind but neither the traditional check boxes, nor the kanban board works for us. This is because our mind executes the tasks in LIFO approach like a stack.
The longer we hold a task in the stack of our mind, the more productivity it will lose. Also, trying multitasking with this stack can cause unpredictable results.
We need to execute them as early as possible. But one by one.
mind makes it easy to work with the stack of our own mind. It uses this simple formula to measure the current productivity level of our mind and uses the appropriate colors to represent the state.
p = O - b
Where p is productivity, O is the optimal (desired) productivity, and b is backlog.
In other words, the more tasks you keep on your mind and the longer you keep them there, the less productive you will become.
You want to keep this stack empty.
You need cargo to install mind.
bash
cargo install mind
Push tasks into the mind stack (or continue with an existing task)
```bash mind
```
Pop the current task from the mind stack
```bash mind pop
mind p ```
Or while in interactive mode
```bash /pop
/p ```
Supported commands in both CLI and interactive mode
Command | Aliases | Action ---------------|-----------|------------------------------------------ {num} | | Continue with the task at the given position pop | p | Pop out the current task pop {num} | p {num} | Pop out the task at the given position edit | e | Edit the current task edit {num} | e {num} | Edit the task at the given position edit reminders | e r | Edit the reminders get | g | Get details of the current task get {num} | g {num} | Get details of the task at the given position remind | r | Turn the current task into a reminder remind {num} | r {num} | Turn the specified task into a reminder
Example 1: Add all the TODO
and FIXME
items from the codebase.
bash
grep -nR TODO . | mind
grep -nR FIXME . | mind
Example 2: Continue with the task positioned at [3]
bash
mind 3
bash
/3
Example 3: Pop the task positioned at [3]
bash
mind p 3
bash
/p 3
Example 4: Edit the task positioned at [3]
bash
mind e 3
bash
/e 3
Example 5: Get details of the task positioned at [3]
bash
mind g 3
bash
/g 3
```bash mind edit reminders
mind e r
/e r ```
Add the reminders in the following format
```yaml
name: "Test reminder everyday at 10:30 pm IST" when: "2020-07-10T22:30:00+05:30" repeat: EveryDay
name: "Test reminder every other day at 10:30 pm IST" when: "2020-07-10T22:30:00+05:30" repeat: EveryNthDay: 2
name: Test reminder every week at 11 am IST when: "2020-07-10T11:00:00+05:30" repeat: EveryWeek
name: Test reminder every 3rd week at 11 am IST when: "2020-07-10T11:00:00+05:30" repeat: EveryNthWeek: 3
name: "Test reminder every saturday and sunday at 9:15 am IST" when: "2020-07-10T09:15:00+05:30" repeat: Weekdays:
name: "Test reminder every 2nd saturday at 9:15 am IST" when: "2020-07-10T09:15:00+05:30" repeat: EveryNthWeekday: n: 2 weekday: Sat ```
I'll keep adding features (small or big) and keep improving the code quality while I learn more cool ways to be productive and become a better developer.