\input texinfo.tex @c -*-texinfo-*- @c %**start of header @setfilename ../../info/todo-mode @settitle Todo Mode User Manual @syncodeindex fn cp @syncodeindex vr cp @syncodeindex ky cp @c %**end of header @copying Copyright @copyright{} 2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @quotation Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover texts being ``A GNU Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''. (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and modify this GNU manual.'' @end quotation @end copying @dircategory Emacs misc features @direntry * Todo Mode: (todo-mode). Make and maintain todo lists. @end direntry @titlepage @title Todo Mode User Manual @subtitle Facilities for making and maintaining todo lists. @author Stephen Berman @page @vskip 0pt plus 1filll @insertcopying @end titlepage @contents @ifnottex @node Top @top Todo Mode User Manual This manual describes the version of Todo mode first appearing in Emacs 24.4. @insertcopying @end ifnottex @menu * Overview:: * Todo Mode Entry Points:: * Key Binding Conventions:: * Navigation:: Moving within and between categories. * Editing:: Adding, deleting and changing todo files, categories and items. * Todo Archives:: Files of done todo items. * Marked Items:: Acting on multiple items simultaneously. * Todo Categories Mode:: Table of categories and item counts. * Searching for Items:: * Todo Filtered Items Mode:: Making virtual categories of items from different categories and files. * Todo Display Features:: * Printing Todo Buffers:: * Legacy Todo Mode Files:: Converting old-style todo files. * GNU Free Documentation License:: @detailmenu --- The Detailed Node Listing --- Overview * Levels of Organization:: * Todo Items as Diary Entries:: Editing * File Editing:: * Category Editing:: * Item Editing:: Item Editing * Inserting New Items:: * Editing Item Headers and Text:: * Relocating and Removing Items:: Relocating and Removing Items * Reprioritizing Items:: * Moving and Deleting Items:: * Done Items:: Todo Archives * Creating and Visiting Archives:: * Todo Archive Mode:: Todo Categories Mode * Table of Item Counts:: * Reordering Categories:: Todo Filtered Items Mode * Filtering Items:: * Todo Filtered Items Mode Commands:: * Files of Filtered Items:: Todo Display Features * Faces:: * Item Prefix:: * Other Display Commands and Options:: @end detailmenu @end menu @node Overview, Todo Mode Entry Points, Top, Top @chapter Overview The Todo mode package provides facilities for making and maintaining todo lists. A todo list is a list of todo items---things to do (in the widest sense)---arranged in order of priority, with the highest priority item at the top of the list and the lowest priority item at the bottom. This manual describes the Todo mode user interface. Todo mode comprises a large number of commands and user options for creating, displaying, navigating and editing todo lists, distributed across five major modes. The principle major mode is Todo mode; the other four (Todo Edit mode, Todo Archive mode, Todo Categories mode, and Todo Filtered Items mode) are subsidiary to and accessible from Todo mode. This version of Todo mode greatly expands on, and in significant ways differs from, the original version; for details and consequences of the most important differences, @ref{Legacy Todo Mode Files}. @menu * Levels of Organization:: * Todo Items as Diary Entries:: @end menu @node Levels of Organization, Todo Items as Diary Entries, , Overview @section Levels of Organization In Todo mode each todo list is identified with a named category, so you can group together thematically related todo items. Each category is stored in a file, which thus provides a further level of organization. You can create as many todo files, and in each as many categories, as you want. All todo files reside in a single directory, whose location is specified by the user option @code{todo-directory}. This directory may also contain other types of Todo files, which are discussed later (@pxref{Todo Archive Mode} and @ref{Todo Filtered Items Mode}). Emacs recognizes Todo files by their extension, so when you visit the files the buffer is in the appropriate mode and the current category is correctly displayed. When you use a Todo mode command to create a todo file, the extension @samp{.todo} is automatically added to the base name you choose (as a rule, this name is also used for the other types of Todo files, which have their own extensions). As a user, you only have to deal with the base name of a Todo file. When you create a new todo file, you must also add at least one category to it, and each todo item belongs to a category. It is not possible to have an uncategorized todo list, but you can always make a catch-all category with a generic name like ``Todo'', which is in fact the default name assigned to the first category when you create a new todo file, if you don't provide a different name; you can change the default by customizing @code{todo-initial-category}. The most basic level of organization is the todo item itself, since it contains the information about what you want to do. As detailed in subsequent sections of this manual, most Todo mode commands and user options concern ways of classifying and deploying this information by associating various kinds of metadata with it, e.g., the category it belongs to, its priority, whether it is to be included in the Emacs diary, date and time stamps, whether it is done or still to do. @node Todo Items as Diary Entries, , Levels of Organization, Overview @section Todo Items as Diary Entries Each todo item is also a potential diary item: if you include a todo file in the Emacs diary file (@pxref{Fancy Diary Display,,, emacs}), the Fancy Diary display will show those todo items that are not marked with @code{todo-nondiary-marker}. This effectively augments the Emacs diary with categorized diary entries. For the various options available for making a todo item a diary entry, see @ref{Inserting New Items} and @ref{Editing Item Headers and Text}. To ensure the proper display of todo items in the Fancy Diary display, they must have the format of diary entries, i.e., they have to begin with a date string recognized by the Emacs diary,@footnote{Two types of dates recognized by the Emacs diary are not supported in the current Todo mode implementation: sexp diary entries and date strings in which the year is omitted (however, the latter type is equivalent to using @samp{*} for an arbitrary year, which Todo mode does support).} and if they are longer than one line, all lines but the first must begin with white space. Todo mode ensures that these requirements are satisfied (@pxref{Other Display Commands and Options}). The Fancy Diary display is also Todo mode aware: if it contains an item from a Todo mode file, clicking or typing @key{RET} on this item will switch to the buffer visiting that file and properly display the item's category, with point on the item. @node Todo Mode Entry Points, Key Binding Conventions, Overview, Top @chapter Todo Mode Entry Points To initialize your first todo file, invoke the command @code{todo-show}. This prompts you for a file name (defaulting to the value of @code{todo-initial-file}), prompts you for the name of the first category (defaulting to the value of @code{todo-initial-category}), creates and visits the file and displays the category in Todo mode, and then prompts you to enter the first item. If you choose not to enter an item now, simply type @kbd{C-g}, which leaves the category empty but otherwise well-formed. If you prefer not to be prompted to enter an item on adding a new category, disable the option @code{todo-add-item-if-new-category}. Once at least one todo file exists, invoking @code{todo-show} enters Todo mode. Invoked with a prefix argument, the command prompts for which todo file to visit. Otherwise, the first invocation of this command after loading the Todo mode package visits the default todo file (option @code{todo-default-todo-file}) and shows its first category. (You can get a different display with the first invocation of @code{todo-show} by customizing the option @code{todo-show-first}; @pxref{Todo Categories Mode} and @ref{Files of Filtered Items}.) If you leave Todo mode and later invoke @code{todo-show} to re-enter it, by default this returns you to the current (i.e., last displayed) category of the current todo file, which is the one in the most recently selected and still live buffer visiting a todo file. If you disable the option @code{todo-show-current-file}, then non-initial invocations of @code{todo-show} always return to the first or current category of the default todo file. If you want to enter Todo mode and go directly to a specific category instead the first or current category in the current or default todo file, use the command @code{todo-jump-to-category}; @ref{Navigation}, for details. You can also enter Todo mode by invoking a todo item insertion command; @ref{Inserting New Items}, for details. The most convenient way to use these commands to enter Todo mode is to define global key bindings for them in your init file. Good choices are for @code{todo-show} and @code{todo-jump-to-category} are @kbd{C-c t} and @kbd{C-c j}, since these commands are bound to @kbd{t} and @kbd{j}, respectively, in Todo mode. For invoking item insertion from outside of Todo mode, it is useful to bind @code{todo-insertion-map}, which is the key map containing the bindings of all Todo item insertion commands, to @kbd{C-c i}, since it is bound to @kbd{i} in Todo mode; to complete the invocation, supply the rest of the key sequence (@pxref{Inserting New Items}). You can also visit a Todo file via @code{find-file} or Dired, like any other file, and since Emacs recognizes it, the buffer will automatically be in the appropriate Todo mode. Moreover, as long as the command you use to visit the file is listed in the option @code{todo-visit-files-commands} (which by default contains @code{find-file} and @code{dired-find-file}), it will also correctly display the file's first category on first visiting the file (otherwise you have to use one of the commands for navigating between categories in order to get a proper display). You can leave Todo mode by typing @kbd{q} (@code{todo-quit}), which buries the current todo file buffer. Doing this also saves any changes you have made to the file, and leaves both the file and the category that was displayed on quitting current for subsequent Todo mode commands (unless the buffer made current by quitting is visiting another file and category in Todo mode, in which case the latter become current for Todo mode commands). @node Key Binding Conventions, Navigation, Todo Mode Entry Points, Top @chapter Key Binding Conventions For Todo mode commands to function properly, it is essential to maintain the correct format at all three levels of organization---item, category, and file. Todo mode tries to minimize the risk of format corruption by hiding certain parts of the format from the user, making the buffer read-only and suppressing the self-insertion keys. Consequently, it is normally impossible to make changes to your todo files without explicitly invoking Todo mode commands. A beneficial side effect of this restrictiveness is that you can invoke almost all Todo commands by typing ordinary printing characters, either singly or in specified sequences, without using modifier keys, except for the shift key for capitalization and the raw prefix argument @kbd{C-u}; numeric prefix arguments can be entered just by typing a number key. The predefined key bindings in Todo are more or less mnemonic. As a rule, key sequences beginning with @kbd{C} are bound to commands applying to categories, sequences beginning with @kbd{F} apply to (non-archive) file-level commands, and those beginning with @kbd{A} apply to archives (a special type of Todo file; @ref{Todo Archive Mode}). Todo commands applying to items, which constitute the majority, are bound to lower case key sequences. @node Navigation, Editing, Key Binding Conventions, Top @chapter Navigation The navigation commands are for making another todo file, category, or item the current one by moving point to it.@footnote{Many editing commands can also do this by side effect, but since that is not their main function, they are not included in this section.} Since these commands are likely to be used frequently and repetitively, it is convenient for their key bindings to be single lower case keys, even for navigation commands applying to categories and files. Two of the navigation commands were already mentioned in the section on Todo mode entry points: @table @kbd @item t Display another todo file in the selected window (@code{todo-show}). When you invoke this command in Todo mode, it prompts for a file name, which you can choose via minibuffer completion (like invoking @code{todo-show} with a prefix argument outside of Todo mode). If a buffer is already visiting that file, it displays its current category; if invoking @kbd{t} opens the file, it display its first category (by default; see the option @code{todo-show-first} for other possibilities). @item j Display another todo category in the selected window (@code{todo-jump-to-category}). When you invoke this command, it prompts for a category name, which you can choose via minibuffer completion. The candidates for completion include the categories in the current todo file as well as those in the files listed in the option @code{todo-category-completions-files}. If you type @key{RET} without choosing a category, the current category of the current todo file is automatically selected (this can be a useful shortcut when you invoke @code{todo-jump-to-category} outside of Todo mode). If you type the name of a non-existing category, you can add this to the file as a new category and jump to it. If you invoke this command with a prefix argument, it first you prompts for which todo file to jump to (which you can also choose with minibuffer completion) and then for which category from that file; in this case, completion is only against the categories in the selected file. @end table It is also convenient to navigate back and forth sequentially between the categories of a single todo file. The categories of a todo file are numbered consecutively starting with @samp{1}.@footnote{A category's number is automatically assigned when the category is created: the category is appended to the end of the file, so its number is simply the highest until another category is added. There is no command in Todo mode to reorder the numbering of the categories in a todo file, but this is possible from the file's table of categories; @ref{Todo Categories Mode}.} The current category's number and name appear in the mode line. @table @kbd @item f Move point to the first item of the category numerically directly following the current category (@code{todo-forward-category}). @item b Move point to the first item of the category numerically directly preceding the current category (@code{todo-backward-category}). @end table With @kbd{f} and @kbd{b} you can cycle through the categories, so for example, if the last category is current and you type @kbd{f}, then the first category becomes current. You can also navigate between the items in the current category: @table @kbd @item n Move point down to the next item below the current one (i.e., to the item with the next lower priority) (@code{todo-next-item}). @item p Move point up to the item directly above the current one (i.e., to the item with the next higher priority) (@code{todo-previous-item}). @end table These commands also accept a positive numeric prefix argument; e.g., typing @kbd{5 n} or @kbd{5 p} navigates in one step to the item five items lower or higher than the current one. Navigation to other types of Todo files is discussed in the relevant sections below. @node Editing, Todo Archives, Navigation, Top @chapter Editing Editing in Todo mode means making structural or textual changes at one of the levels of organization (file, category, or item). Structural editing includes adding, relocating and removing, textual editing includes renaming files or categories and changing an item's content or date, or adding certain kinds of marks or tags to items. To save changes you make to the current todo file, type @kbd{s} (@code{todo-save}). Changes are also saved on quitting Todo mode with @kbd{q}. @menu * File Editing:: * Category Editing:: * Item Editing:: @end menu @node File Editing, Category Editing, , Editing @section File Editing and Todo Edit Mode There are four file-level editing commands: @table @kbd @item F a Add a new todo file (@code{todo-add-file}). This command prompts for a name and creates the file in @code{todo-directory}, adding the @samp{.todo} extension (so you should not include the extension in the name you enter). The command also prompts for the file's first category and, if option @code{todo-add-item-if-new-category} is enabled (the default), for that category's first item. @item F r Rename the current todo file (@code{todo-rename-file}). If called with a prefix argument, prompt for a todo file and rename it. If the todo file has an archive (@pxref{Todo Archive Mode}) or there are corresponding filtered items files (@pxref{Todo Filtered Items Mode}), this command renames these accordingly. If there are live buffers visiting any of these files, the command also rename them accordingly. @item F k Delete the current todo file (@code{todo-delete-file}).@footnote{The key binding of this command is mnemonic for ``kill'' to parallel the binding @kbd{k} for item deletion, since @kbd{d} is bound to another item editing command (@pxref{Done Items}).} If the todo file has an archive (@pxref{Todo Archive Mode}), prompt whether to delete that as well. This command also kill the buffers visiting the deleted files. @item F e This command (@code{todo-edit-file}) changes the buffer's major mode to Todo Edit mode. In this mode the entire file is visible, the buffer is writeable and you can use the self-insertion keys and standard Emacs editing commands to make changes. To return to Todo mode, type @kbd{C-x C-q} (@code{todo-edit-quit}). The command @kbd{F e} is not intended for normal editing of items and categories, as it circumvents the restrictions that Todo imposes to protect against file format corruption (i.e., all categories, not just the current one, and all internal formatting are exposed and editable). It is provided primarily as a convenience for two types of use cases that are likely to arise infrequently. One is to be able to use standard Emacs commands like @code{query-replace} to replace a piece of text that occurs in different categories throughout the file. The other use case is to recover from a mistake, such as accidentally deleting an item, since this cannot be undone in Todo mode. Using @kbd{C-x C-q} to quit Todo Edit mode provides a measure of safety, since it runs a file format check, signaling an error if the format has become invalid. However, this check cannot tell if the number of items changed, which could result in the file containing inconsistent information (see the cautionary note in @ref{Reordering Categories}, for more details). For this reason @kbd{F e} should be used with caution. @end table @node Category Editing, Item Editing, File Editing, Editing @section Category Editing The following commands are available for editing at the category level (for additional category-editing commands, which are extensions of item commands, @pxref{Editing Item Headers and Text}): @table @kbd @item C a Add a new category to the current todo file and make that category current (@code{todo-add-category}). If called with a prefix argument, prompt for a file name and add the new category to that file. This command is similar to using @kbd{j}, but it only accepts category names that are not the name of an existing category in the file. @item C r Rename the current category (@code{todo-rename-category}). If this category's file has an archive (@pxref{Todo Archive Mode}) with a corresponding category, rename the category there as well. @item C m Move the current category (with all its items) to another todo file (@code{todo-move-category}). If this category's file has an archive (@pxref{Todo Archive Mode}) with a corresponding category, this command also moves that category to the archive file corresponding to the moved to todo file; if there is no such archive file, the command creates it and adds the category. @item C k Delete the current category (@code{todo-delete-category}).@footnote{This binding is mnemonic for ``kill'' to parallel the binding @kbd{k} for item deletion, since @kbd{d} is bound to another item editing command (@pxref{Done Items}).} To delete a category that contains items, you have to confirm your intent; if the category is empty, deletion is immediate. @item C g Merge the items of one category into another category, delete the first category and make the second category current (@code{todo-merge-category}). If both the first and second categories also have archived items (@pxref{Todo Archive Mode}), merge the former to the latter. If only the first category has archived items, rename the archive category to the merged to category. Minibuffer completion of the name of the category merged to works as with the navigation command @kbd{j}, and as with that command, passing a prefix argument, i.e., typing @kbd{C-u C g}, prompts for a file and confines merging to a category in that file. @end table @node Item Editing, , Category Editing, Editing @section Item Editing Todo mode provides a wide variety of commands for adding and textually changing items, as well as for deleting and relocating items. @menu * Inserting New Items:: * Editing Item Headers and Text:: * Relocating and Removing Items:: @end menu @node Inserting New Items, Editing Item Headers and Text, , Item Editing @subsection Inserting New Items There are many commands for adding new todo items. The command names contain the word ``insert'' instead of ``add'' and their key bindings are sequences beginning with @kbd{i}. The motivation for this terminology is that speaking of adding an item to a category suggests appending it to the top or bottom, whereas you can insert an item into the category anywhere, giving each new item any priority in the list. @table @kbd @item i i This is the basic command for inserting new items into a category (@code{todo-insert-item}). Called without a prefix argument, it prompts for the text of the item and its priority (a number between 1 and one more than the number of items already in the category), both of which you enter in the minibuffer, and inserts the item into the current category of the current todo file at the position in the list corresponding to the priority you chose. Called with one prefix argument, it also prompts for a category, and called with two prefix arguments, it prompts for both a file and a category from that file, and inserts the item accordingly. Category name completion works as with the navigation command @kbd{j}. @end table Each invocation of @kbd{i i} adds a header string to the item, which includes at least the current date in the same format used by @code{diary-insert-entry} (@pxref{Date Formats,,, emacs}). You can control what other information is included in the header by customizing the following options: @itemize @bullet @item @code{todo-always-add-time-string} is for including or omitting the current time. The time string is omitted by default. @item @code{todo-include-in-diary} is for specifying whether the item appears in the Fancy Diary display by adding or omitting @code{todo-nondiary-marker}. By default, new todo items are marked for exclusion from the diary. @item @code{todo-diary-nonmarking} is for adding or omitting @code{diary-nonmarking-symbol} to items displayed in the diary, to control whether they are marked in the calendar (@pxref{Format of Diary File,,, emacs}). By default, todo items that are diary entries are marked in the calendar. @end itemize Instead of always adding the same header information to a new item, you can use more specific insertion commands that let you decide what to include in the item header each time you insert a new item. And instead of always being prompted to choose the new item's priority, you can invoke a command to insert it at the position (hence with the priority) of the item at point. Finally, instead of always typing the text of the new item in the minibuffer, you can invoke a command that makes the selected region in an Emacs buffer automatically become the new item's text. The following paragraphs discuss how to invoke these commands by typing certain key sequences. There are eight parameters of item insertion in Todo mode, six concerning the item header, and one each concerning its priority and its text. Each unique combination of these parameters produces a different insertion command. The command @kbd{i i} realizes one of these combinations. For the commands that realize the remaining combinations it is convenient to associate each parameter with a mnemonically chosen key. Then by typing certain sequences of these keys, you complete the insertion command invocation that realizes the specified combination. As with @kbd{i i}, the effect of many of these commands also depends on the values of the item insertion options mentioned above (see the examples below). Here is a list of the parameters and their associated keys, in the order in which you must type them when building a key sequence (this order roughly reflects the order in which the corresponding parts of the item occur in a category listing): @enumerate @item @kbd{y} for diary (non)inclusion; @item @kbd{k} for adding or omitting `diary-nonmarking-symbol'; @item @kbd{c} for adding the date header by clicking a date in the Emacs calendar, or@* @kbd{d} for interactively entering the date header as a string of year, month and day number components in the minibuffer, or@* @kbd{n} for interactively entering the date header as a weekday name in the minibuffer; @item @kbd{t} for adding a time string to the header in the minibuffer (including the empty string, which amounts to omitting the time); @item @kbd{h} for inserting the new item in the position of the item at point (``here''), or@* @kbd{r} to use the text of the selected region as the item's text. @end enumerate Each insertion command key sequence begins (disregarding prefix arguments) with @kbd{i}, followed by one or more of these eight keys, in the order listed. But as you can see in the above table, since some of the insertion parameters are mutually exclusive, they occupy only five positions, so the complete (unprefixed) sequences are maximally six keys long. Shorter sequences are also possible, since a parameter may be omitted. But since the order in any key sequence is fixed, if the last key in the sequence could be followed by another insertion key, i.e., if the last key is not @kbd{h} or @kbd{r}, it has to be doubled to complete the sequence, otherwise it would be interpreted as a prefix sequence (this is why the binding for the basic item insertion command is @kbd{i i} and not @kbd{i}). Here are some examples of item insertion command key sequences: @itemize @bullet @item @kbd{i h} inserts a new item at the position of the item at point (pushing the latter down) with a header containing the current date and, depending on the values of the mentioned options, possibly the current time and diary-related markings. @item @kbd{i y h} does the same as the preceding command, except that @code{todo-nondiary-marker} is added if @code{todo-include-in-diary} is non-nil and omitted if that option is nil; that is, the diary key @kbd{y} overrides the setting of this option. @item @kbd{i y t h} does the same as the preceding command, except that it prompts for a time string instead of automatically inserting the current time; however, typing @key{RET} at the prompt returns the current time if @code{todo-always-add-time-string} is non-nil, otherwise the empty string (i.e., no time string). @item @kbd{i y t t} does the same as the preceding command, except that it prompts for the item's priority and inserts it accordingly. @end itemize Note that the commands whose key sequences include @kbd{y}, @kbd{k} or @kbd{t} reverse the effect of the options @code{todo-include-in-diary}, @code{todo-diary-nonmarking} and @code{todo-always-add-time-string}, respectively, thus temporarily overriding their values. The names of the item insertion commands correspond to their key bindings, e.g., @kbd{i h} is bound to @code{todo-insert-item-here}, @kbd{i y h} to @code{todo-insert-item-diary-here}, etc. But since there are so many combinations, instead of trying to memorize either the names or the key sequences, you can, as usual, just type an initial part of a key sequence (minimally @kbd{i}), followed by @kbd{C-h} to see the valid completions. An alternative to using the key @kbd{c} for choosing the item's date from the calendar is also available: if point is on a date in the calendar, typing @kbd{i t} (@code{todo-insert-item-from-calendar}) will prompt for a new item and its priority and insert it in the current category. Like @kbd{i i} and the other item insertion commands, this also accepts one or two prefix arguments for choosing the category via minibuffer completion. Note, however, that the key sequence @kbd{i t} is not defined in Todo mode but in the Calendar mode keymap. It is a convenient shortcut if you happen to be using the calendar when you decide to make a new todo item. (Contrast this with a command like @kbd{i c c}, which pops open the calendar after you have entered the item's text, and then you can choose a date from the calendar.) There is one more item insertion command, which does not derive from the item insertion parameters: @table @kbd @item i p This command (@code{todo-copy-item}) makes a complete copy of the item at point, including its header, prompts for its priority in the current category and inserts it accordingly. @end table @noindent This command is useful for quickly adding a todo item whose text or header you want to differ only partly from that of an existing item: after inserting the copy, you can quickly edit it as needed by using commands described in the next section. @node Editing Item Headers and Text, Relocating and Removing Items, Inserting New Items, Item Editing @subsection Editing Item Headers and Text There are a number of commands for editing an existing item's text or header; these commands are bound to key sequences with @kbd{e}. There are two commands for editing an item's text (and manually editing its header), one appropriate for short items and simple edits and one better suited for more complex changes or for editing lengthy items: @table @kbd @item e e Edit the text of the current item in the minibuffer (@code{todo-edit-item}). If called with a prefix argument (@kbd{C-u e e}), the item's header is also included in the minibuffer and so can be edited manually. @item e m Edit the text of the current item in a special buffer in Todo Edit mode (@code{todo-edit-multiline-item}). When you have finished editing, type @kbd{C-x C-q} to return to Todo mode; this runs a format check to ensure the item is well-formed.@footnote{Unlike the command @kbd{F e} (@pxref{File Editing}), @kbd{e m} does not expose you to the risk of putting the file in an inconsistent state, since it puts only the current item in Todo Edit mode.} @end table A number of commands are available for interactively editing all or part of the item header, permitting quick edits and helping avoid formatting errors. The following three commands are for editing any or all of the year, month and day components of a date header: @table @kbd @item e d t Successively prompt for changes to the date's year, month and day number, and if the option @code{todo-always-add-time-string} is non-nil, also for editing the time string (see also @kbd{e t} below). @item e d a Change the date to today's date. @item e d c This command pops up the Emacs calendar, and after you type @key{RET} on a date in the calendar makes that date the item's date. @end table @noindent You can also use these commands on items whose date header consists of a weekday name, which then changes to a header with year, month and day components. Each of the following three commands, in contrast to the preceding three, changes only a single date component and has no effect on a date header consisting of a weekday name: @table @kbd @item e d y @itemx e d m @itemx e d d Prompt for changing just the year, month or day number, respectively; if invoked with a positive or negative numeric prefix argument, directly increment or decrement the date component accordingly and automatically adjust the other date component if necessary. For example, if the date string is ``January 1, 2013'', typing @kbd{- 3 e d d} results in ``December 29, 2012''. @end table @table @kbd @item e d n Prompt for a weekday name and make it the item's date header. Note that this replaces an existing date string, it does not add the day name to the date string. @item e t Edit just the item's time string. A time string can be added both to a date string and to a weekday name. If you type @key{RET} at the prompt, this omits a time string from the header, or deletes an existing time string. @item e y y Change the item's diary inclusion status by adding or removing @code{todo-nondiary-marker}. @item e y k Change the item's diary marking status by adding or removing @code{diary-nonmarking-symbol} (this command has an effect only if the item is not marked for exclusion from the diary). @end table @noindent Parallel to the latter two item-level commands are the following category-level commands: @table @kbd @item C e y @itemx C e k Add @code{todo-nondiary-marker} and @code{diary-nonmarking-symbol}, respectively, to all todo items in the current category; if invoked with a prefix argument, these markings are removed from all items in the category. @end table @node Relocating and Removing Items, , Editing Item Headers and Text, Item Editing @subsection Relocating and Removing Items In addition to inserting a new todo item and changing the text or header of an existing item, you can also move an item to another category (i.e., recategorize it), change its priority within its category, delete it from the category and file, or mark it as a ``done'' item, which removes it from the todo list but does not delete it. @menu * Reprioritizing Items:: * Moving and Deleting Items:: * Done Items:: @end menu @node Reprioritizing Items, Moving and Deleting Items, , Relocating and Removing Items @subsubsection Reprioritizing Items There are three ways to change a todo item's priority: @table @kbd @item r Raise the current item's priority by one, exchanging its position in the list with that of the item directly above it (@code{todo-raise-item-priority}). @item l Lower the current item's priority by one, exchanging its position in the list with that of the item directly below it (@code{todo-lower-item-priority}). @item # Prompt for a number and relocate the item to the corresponding position in the list (@code{todo-set-item-priority}). For example, entering @kbd{3} at the prompt makes the item the third in the category, i.e., gives it third highest priority. You can also pass the desired priority as a numeric prefix argument, e.g., @kbd{3 #} gives the item third highest priority without prompting. (Prefix arguments have no effect with @kbd{r} or @kbd{l}.) @end table @node Moving and Deleting Items, Done Items, Reprioritizing Items, Relocating and Removing Items @subsubsection Moving and Deleting Items You can move an item to another category, thereby recategorizing it: @table @kbd @item m Move the item at point to another category (@code{todo-move-item}). This prompts for a category to move the item to, displays that category, prompts for the priority of the moved item in the category moved to and inserts the item accordingly. Minibuffer completion of the name of the category moved to works as with the navigation command @kbd{j}, and as with that command, passing a prefix argument prompts for a file and moves the item to a category in that file; and if the category name you enter is new, then you are asked whether to add the category to the file, and if you affirm, the item is moved to the new category. @end table You delete an item, thereby permanently removing it: @table @kbd @item k Delete the todo item at point (@code{todo-delete-item}; the binding is mnemonic for ``kill'', since @kbd{d} is used for marking items as done (@pxref{Done Items}); but note that @kbd{k} does not put the item into the kill ring). This command requires confirmation that you want to delete the item, since you cannot undo the deletion in Todo mode. (You could use @kbd{F e} to recover the item, but be aware that this would put the file in an inconsistent state, which you can recover from, but not without a risk; cf.@: the cautionary note in @ref{Reordering Categories}.) @end table @quotation Note Todo commands that require user confirmation, such as @kbd{k}, use a modified form of @code{y-or-n-p}, which by default only accepts @kbd{y} or @kbd{Y}, but not @key{SPC}, as an affirmative answer. This is to diminish the risk of unintentionally executing the command, which is especially important with commands that do deletion, since there is no Todo command to undo a deletion. If you want to be able to use SPC for confirmation, enable the option @code{todo-y-with-space}. @end quotation @node Done Items, , Moving and Deleting Items, Relocating and Removing Items @subsubsection Done Items When the activity or thing that a todo item is about has been done, it is natural to eliminate the item from the todo list. But instead of deleting it permanently, you may prefer to keep a record of your accomplishments by marking the item as done. In Todo mode, this removes the done item from the todo list, so as not to clutter it up, and stores it elsewhere. Such stored items form a record or diary of things done. The Todo package provides two such stores: the ``done items'' section of a Todo category, described here, and done item archives (@pxref{Todo Archive Mode}). @table @kbd @item d This command (@code{todo-item-done}) removes the todo item at point from the todo list, appends to the original header a header consisting of @code{todo-done-string} (by default ``DONE '') and the current date, and if @code{todo-always-add-time-string} is enabled, also the current time, and adds the resulting done item to the top of the done items section of the category. Invoked with a prefix argument, it also prompts you to enter a comment, which is appended to the end of the done item, prefixed with @code{todo-comment-string} (by default ``COMMENT: ''). @end table A category's done items section is located below the last todo (i.e., not done) item in the category. By default this section is hidden from view. There are two commands for viewing and hiding done items; since these are toggle commands, for convenience they also have a single key binding: @table @kbd @item C v @itemx v Make the done items section of the current category visible if it is hidden, or hide it if it is visible (@code{todo-toggle-view-done-items}). If you always want to see the done items section on entering a category, enable the option @code{todo-show-with-done}; you can still use @kbd{C v} or @kbd{v} to hide (and unhide) it. @item F V @itemx V Toggle the standard category display in the current todo file, i.e., display only the done items section of each category in the file, or if this is visible, hide it again and display only the todo items section (@code{todo-toggle-view-done-only}). @end table Three editing commands for done items are available: @table @kbd @item e c If you type this command (@code{todo-edit-done-item-comment}) when point is on a done item that has a comment, you can edit the text of the comment. If you invoke it with a prefix argument (@kbd{C-u e c}), the comment is deleted on confirmation. If the done item does not have a comment, this command allows you to add one. @item m Move the done item at point to the top of the done items section of another category (@code{todo-move-item}). This is useful in case, after having relocated an item to its category's done items section, you create a category that is better suited to the content of the done item than its current category, so you can recategorize the done item. @item u If you decide the done item at point is not done after all, this command ``undoes'' it, i.e., restores it to the todo list of its category, with the priority you choose for it (@code{todo-item-undone}). If the done item has a comment, you are asked whether to delete it from the restored item. @end table @node Todo Archives, Marked Items, Editing, Top @chapter Todo Archives When the done items section of a category itself starts to become cluttered, or if you just want to store some accomplished todo items in a separate file, you can move them to a Todo archive. This is a file with exactly the same structure as a todo file, i.e., divided into categories, but differs in that the categories contain only done items. Todo archives reside, like todo files, in @code{todo-directory} but have the extension @samp{.toda} instead of @samp{.todo}. @menu * Creating and Visiting Archives:: * Todo Archive Mode:: @end menu @node Creating and Visiting Archives, Todo Archive Mode, , Todo Archives @section Creating and Visiting Archives Todo mode provides the following command for archiving items: @table @kbd @item A d This command (@code{todo-archive-done-item}) archives the done item at point. Invoked with a prefix argument, it archives all done items in the current todo category. If an archive for the current todo file already exists and contains a category with the same name as the current todo category, then this command moves the done item to the top of the corresponding archive category. If the archive exists but it does not have a corresponding category, this command creates the category in the archive and moves the done item to it. If no archive for the todo file exists, the command creates both the archive file, using the same base name as that of the todo file, as well as the category, and moves the done item to it. @end table Typing @kbd{A d} is also the only way within the Todo mode package to create an archive file and its categories. Consequently, as a rule each archive file corresponds to exactly one todo file and has the same base name as this file, and each category in an archive file corresponds to and has the same name as a category in the corresponding todo file. Exceptions can only arise if you delete a todo file but not the corresponding archive, or if you delete a category in a todo file that has a corresponding category in an archive. You might be inclined to do the latter if you have archived all the items from a given todo category and you don't plan to add new items to it. In particular, if you have numerous such empty categories in a todo file, this can make sequential navigation in the file annoying. You can avoid this annoyance by deleting these categories, but only at the cost of putting the todo file out of synch with the archive file. You may find it preferable not to delete empty todo categories but to enable the option @code{todo-skip-archived-categories}. When this is non-nil, such empty todo categories are skipped over by the sequential category navigation commands @kbd{f} and @kbd{b}, so they don't distract you while navigating and you maintain the structural correspondence between todo and archive files (you can also still jump to empty todo categories with @kbd{j}). If you rename a todo category that has a corresponding category in an archive, the archive category is also automatically identically renamed. Likewise, if you move such a todo category to another file; in this case, if there is no archive file corresponding to the todo file the category is moved to, then the archive is automatically created and the archived category is moved to it. There are two commands in Todo mode for visiting archive files: @table @kbd @item A f Switch to a buffer displaying the archived category corresponding to the current todo category (@code{todo-find-archive}). If the todo category has no archived items, the command asks if you want to visit the archive anyway. If there is no archive for this todo file, it asks if you want to visit another archive, which you can select via minibuffer completion. @item A c Choose an archive to visit, whether or not the current todo file has an archive (@code{todo-choose-archive}). @end table As with todo files, you can also visit a Todo archive by invoking a standard Emacs file-visiting command; this displays the first (on the initial invocation) or current category of the archive. @node Todo Archive Mode, , Creating and Visiting Archives, Todo Archives @section Todo Archive Mode When you visit a Todo archive, the buffer is in Todo Archive mode. It displays categories just as in Todo mode, except that they only contain done items. It provides the same sequential navigation commands as Todo mode: @kbd{f} and @kbd{b} navigate between the categories of the current archive, and @kbd{n} and @kbd{p} navigate between the done items of the current archive category. The commands @kbd{t} and @kbd{j} are also available in Todo Archive mode, and they work the same as in Todo mode, which means they can only be used to return to Todo mode: @kbd{t} prompt for and switch to a todo file, and with @kbd{j} you can only jump to a todo category. These commands exclude archives because an archive file has the same base name as the corresponding todo file, and category name completion uses only the base names, so the commands cannot know which type of file you want to visit. For this reason, there is a special command in Todo Archive mode for jumping to another archive category or visiting another archive file: @table @kbd @item a This command (@code{todo-jump-to-archive-category}) prompts for a category in the current archive and jumps to it. Called with a prefix argument, it prompts for another archive, then for a category in it and jumps to that category. @end table None of the Todo mode editing commands are available in Todo Archive mode, since archives are meant to be static records of accomplished todo items. Should you, however, archive an item by mistake or simply change your mind about the archival status of an item, you can ``unarchive'' it: @table @kbd @item u Restore the done item at point to the top of the done items section of the corresponding category in the corresponding todo file, i.e., an unarchived item remains a done item (@code{todo-unarchive-items}). When the last item in an archive category has been unarchived, the category is automatically deleted from the archive. If this was the only category in the archive, the archive file is also automatically deleted. @end table Since it is natural to visit an archive from the corresponding todo file, it would be convenient to easily return to the todo file when you have finished browsing the archive. If you type `q' to quit Todo Archive mode, this switches to the corresponding todo file and shows the todo category corresponding to the archive category you were just visiting. The command @kbd{F k} (@pxref{File Editing}) is also available in Todo Archive mode. It deletes the current archive file and prompts you whether to delete the corresponding todo file. @node Marked Items, Todo Categories Mode, Todo Archives, Top @chapter Marked Items For many item editing commands it can make sense and be convenient to apply them simultaneously to more than one item in the current category. Todo facilitates this by means of marked items. @table @kbd @item * Mark the item at point if it is unmarked, and remove the mark it is already marked (@code{todo-toggle-mark-item}). The mark is a string specified by the option @code{todo-item-mark} (by default @samp{*}) appended in front of the item header (more precisely, in front of the item's priority number or prefix; see @ref{Todo Display Features}, for details of the latter). After marking the current item, the command advances point to the next item. It also accepts a numeric prefix argument, which allows toggling the mark of multiple consecutive items. @item C * Mark all todo items in the current category. @item C u Unmark all todo item in the current category. @end table You can also use the last two commands to mark or unmark all done items in the category, but only when only the done items section is being displayed, i.e., after invoking @kbd{C V} or @kbd{V}. The following commands operate on marked items: @kbd{k} (deleting), @kbd{m} (moving to another category), @kbd{d} (moving to the done items section; note that @kbd{C-u d} adds the same comment to all marked items), @kbd{A d} (archiving), @kbd{u} (both in Todo mode for undoing a done item and in Todo Archive mode for unarchiving an item), as well as the commands for editing the item header (those beginning with the prefix @kbd{e d} as well as @kbd{e t}, @kbd{e y y} and @kbd{e y k}). The item insertion, textual editing and priority changing commands do not operate on marked items. If you use @kbd{m}, @kbd{d}, @kbd{A d} or @kbd{u} on multiple noncontiguous marked items, the relocated items retain their relative order but are now listed consecutively en bloc. You can mark both todo and done items, but note that only @kbd{m} can apply to both; other commands only affect either marked todo or marked done items, so if both types of items are marked, invoking these commands has no effect and informs you of your erroneous attempt. @node Todo Categories Mode, Searching for Items, Marked Items, Top @chapter Todo Categories Mode It can be helpful to have a compact overview of the categories in a todo file and the types of items it contains; Todo provides a tabular view of this information. @table @kbd @item F c Typing this command (@code{todo-show-categories-table}) in Todo mode or Todo Archive mode switches to a buffer displaying a table that gives an overview of the categories in the current todo or archive file. This buffer is in Todo Categories mode. @end table The table consists of a column containing the names of the categories in the file, followed by columns containing counts of certain types of items in each category. With todo files there are four count types: all todo (i.e., not done) items, diary items (i.e., those todo items lacking the @code{todo-nondiary-marker}, which hence can appear in the Fancy Diary display), done (but not archived) items, and archived items. With archive files all items are done, so the table only has a column for this count. The final row of the table gives total item counts across all categories in the file. Aside from explicitly invoking @kbd{F c} to display the table of categories, you can also arrange to have it displayed on the first invocation of @code{todo-show} for a given file (i.e., either using @code{todo-show} to initiate a Todo session, or calling it in Todo mode to visit another todo file). To do this customize the option @code{todo-show-first}. @menu * Table of Item Counts:: * Reordering Categories:: @end menu @node Table of Item Counts, Reordering Categories, , Todo Categories Mode @section Table of Item Counts Above each column of the table is a labeled button you can press by clicking with the mouse or by typing @key{RET} on it. Pressing an item count button sorts the table alternately in ascending or descending order according to the type of count. Pressing the category button alternates between the initial numerical order of the categories and alphabetical order. In numerical order the column of category names is preceded by a column containing the corresponding category numbers; this column is not displayed in the alphabetical listing. Instead of pressing the buttons, you can also sort the table by typing the following keys: @itemize @item @kbd{c} to sort by category numerically or alphabetically; @item @kbd{t} to sort by todo item counts; @item @kbd{y} to sort by diary item counts; @item @kbd{d} to sort by done item counts; @item @kbd{a} to sort by archived item counts. @end itemize Each row of the table is also buttonized; pressing one of these exits the buffer (killing it), returns to the buffer of the file from which you had invoked `F c', and displays the category that was named in the row button you pressed (i.e., pressing this button jumps to that category). However, if the category named in the row is in a todo file and all of its items have been archived, and you have enabled the option @code{todo-skip-archived-categories}, then pressing the button jumps to the archive category instead of the empty todo category. You can recognize such categories by their items counts in the table---all columns but the archived one have counts of zero---and in addition, their lines in the table are also distinguished from the others by a different face. You can navigate around the table: @table @kbd @item n @itemx @key{TAB} Advance point to the next button. @item p @itemx S-@key{TAB} Put point on the previous button. @end table These commands are cyclic, e.g. when point is on the last button, pressing @kbd{n} moves it to the first button. Typing @kbd{q} exits Todo Categories mode, killing the buffer and returning to the current category in the Todo mode or Todo Archive mode buffer from which you had invoked @kbd{F c}. @node Reordering Categories, , Table of Item Counts, Todo Categories Mode @section Reordering Categories Todo Categories mode provide commands with which you can change the numbering of the categories in the current file. This renumbering has the effect of reordering the categories for sequential navigation by @kbd{f} and @kbd{b} in Todo mode and Todo Archive mode. These commands are only operative when the table displays the categories in their numerical order. They work just like reprioritizing items in Todo mode, hence have the same key bindings: @table @kbd @item r Raise the current line of the table (the one the cursor is on), decreasing the category's number by one (@code{todo-raise-category}). This command exchanges lines, and hence the numbers, of the category at point and the one above it before invoking the command. @item l Lower the current line of the table, increasing the category's number by one (@code{todo-lower-category}). This command exchanges lines, and hence the numbers, of the category at point and the one below it before invoking the command. @item # Prompt for a number between 1 and the number of categories in the file and reorder the table accordingly (@code{todo-set-category-number}). If called with a numeric prefix argument within the allowed range, reorder the table without prompting. @end table The reordering done by these commands remains in effect when you return to Todo mode or Todo Archive mode and, as long as you save the todo or archive file after reordering, in subsequent sessions as well. @quotation @strong{Caution} It is important to be aware that renumbering the categories does not change the textual order of the categories in the file. This is significant if you should invoke @kbd{F e} to edit the entire file manually and in so doing alter the number of items in a category: this will make the item count shown in the table of categories of this file inconsistent with the actual number. You can repair this inconsistency by invoking the command @code{todo-repair-categories-sexp} (which lacks a key binding, since it is meant to be a rarely needed rescue operation). But this will revert any renumbering of the categories you have made, so you will have to renumber them again. This is the reason why you should exercise caution when using @kbd{F e}. @end quotation @node Searching for Items, Todo Filtered Items Mode, Todo Categories Mode, Top @chapter Searching for Items It can be useful to be able to locate and examine all todo items that fit certain criteria, regardless of which category they belong to. One way to do this in Todo mode is by sequentially searching in the file: @table @kbd @item S This command (@code{todo-search}; the key is capital @kbd{S}) prompts for a regular expression, searches from the beginning of the current todo file and displays the category containing the first match it finds, with the match highlighted. If there are further matches, a message saying how many are left is displayed and you are asked if you want to go to the next match. When you reach the last match, or if you decide not to go to further matches, you are asked whether the match highlighting should be removed. @item X This command (@code{todo-clear-matches}) removes any highlighting added by @kbd{S}. This is so you can leave the matches highlighted at the end of the search and remove the highlighting later. @end table These commands are also available in Todo Archive mode. @node Todo Filtered Items Mode, Todo Display Features, Searching for Items, Top @chapter Todo Filtered Items Mode A more powerful alternative to sequential searching is item filtering, by which items from different categories that match specified criteria are gathered and displayed in a new buffer as a kind of virtual category in a distinct mode, Todo Filtered Items mode. @menu * Filtering Items:: * Todo Filtered Items Mode Commands:: * Files of Filtered Items:: @end menu @node Filtering Items, Todo Filtered Items Mode Commands, , Todo Filtered Items Mode @section Filtering Items Todo mode provides three ways to filter items: a general filter for items matching a user-entered regular expression, as with the search command; and two specific filters, one for diary-displayable items (i.e., those lacking @code{todo-nondiary-marker}) and one for top priority items (more on the latter below). The commands for each filter come in pairs, one for filtering just the current todo file and one for filtering a user-specified list of todo files. Thus, there are six item filtering commands:@footnote{The use of @kbd{F} in the key sequences of these commands naturally recalls ``filter'', but is also consistent with the Todo mode mnemonic key binding convention, since the commands involve one or more whole files.} @itemize @bullet @item @kbd{F x x} (@code{todo-filter-regexp-items}) @item @kbd{F x m} (@code{todo-filter-regexp-items-multifile}) @item @kbd{F y y} (@code{todo-filter-diary-items}) @item @kbd{F y m} (@code{todo-filter-diary-items-multifile}) @item @kbd{F t t} (@code{todo-filter-top-priorities}) @item @kbd{F t m} (@code{todo-filter-top-priorities-multifile}) @end itemize There are two ways to specify which files the multifile filtering commands apply to. If there are files you want to filter every time you use these commands, customize the option @code{todo-filter-files}. If you leave this option empty (the default), invoking a multifile filtering command pops up a buffer similar to the Customization buffer for @code{todo-filter-files}, in which you can select files to filter just for this invocation. Diary and top priority items are by definition non-done todo items, but when filtering by regular expression, you can extend the scope of the command to done items by enabling the option @code{todo-filter-done-items}. Then @kbd{F x x} and @kbd{F x m} will gather both matching todo and matching done items (including done items from any archive files corresponding to the selected todo files) into the virtual category of filtered items. There are several ways to specify how many items in each category count as top priorities and hence get filtered by @kbd{F t t} and @kbd{F t m}: @itemize @bullet @item The option @code{todo-top-priorities} specifies a single default number for all categories and all todo files; its default value is 1, which means just the highest priority item in every category is filtered, unless otherwise specified. @item The option @code{todo-top-priorities-overrides} lists file-wide overrides of @code{todo-top-priorities} as well as category-specific overrides. It is empty by default. However, using the Custom facility to set this option would be tedious and error-prone, so instead you should use the commands @kbd{F t s} and @kbd{C t s}. The former sets (i.e., overrides) the default number of top priorities for all categories in the current todo file, and the latter sets the number of top priorities for the current category. To exclude a category or file from filtering by @kbd{F t t} and @kbd{F t m}, set the number to @samp{0}. @item You can invoke `F t t' and `F t m' with a numeric prefix argument, which specifies the number of top priorities in each category just for this invocation, overriding both @code{todo-top-priorities-overrides} and @code{todo-top-priorities}. @end itemize @node Todo Filtered Items Mode Commands, Files of Filtered Items, Filtering Items, Todo Filtered Items Mode @section Todo Filtered Items Mode Commands The output of the item filtering commands looks similar to a regular Todo category, but it is not contained in any todo file and does not have a name on being created, so it is not a ``real'' category but a ``virtual'' category. Another difference is the lack of a done items section; either there are no done items in the list (when the filtered items are diary or top priority items), or these are displayed in the same list as todo items (if you filtered by regular expression and allowed done items). A further difference is that the items have an additional header, between the item's date/time header and its text, specifying which category (and if you invoked a multifile command, also which file) the item comes from, and if you filtered by regular expression, also whether the item comes from a Todo archive. The sequential item navigation commands @kbd{n} and @kbd{p} work the same in Todo Filtered Items mode as in Todo mode, as do the file and category jumping commands @kbd{t} and @kbd{j}; however, the sequential category navigation commands are unavailable, since virtual categories of filtered items are not ordered with respect to ``real'' categories. In addition, Todo Filtered Items mode provides a special navigation command: @table @kbd @item g @itemx @key{RET} If you type this command (@code{todo-go-to-source-item}) with point on a filtered item, the buffer switches to the item's source file (in Todo mode or Todo Archive mode, as the case may be) and displays its category, with point on the item. @end table Filtered items cannot be textually edited, moved to another category, marked done or archived like items in a real todo category, since these would then be out of synch with each other. But there is one type of editing command that does work in Todo Filtered Items mode: changing an item's priority: @table @kbd @item r @itemx l @itemx # These commands raise, lower, or set, respectively, the current item's priority in the virtual category. @end table @noindent Using these commands, you can create a cross-category (and even cross-file) prioritized list of filtered items. However, there is a restriction on these commands in Todo Filtered Items mode: you cannot change the relative priorities of items from the same real category, since that would make the filtered list inconsistent with the source todo list. @node Files of Filtered Items, , Todo Filtered Items Mode Commands, Todo Filtered Items Mode @section Files of Filtered Items Typing @kbd{s} in Todo Filtered Items mode saves the buffer of filtered items to a file in @code{todo-directory}. Files of items filtered by regular expression have the extension @samp{.todr}, those with filtered diary items have the extension @samp{.tody} and those with filtered top priorities have the extension @samp{.todt}. The extensions are added automatically the first time you save the buffer to a file. With filtered top priority or diary items, the file is automatically named on first saving it, using as the base name either the same base name as the single todo file it was generated from, or combining the base names of the todo files used in multifile filtering commands. With items filtered by regular expression, it can be useful to save separate lists generated from the same file(s) using different regular expressions, so when saving such a list, you are prompted for a short identifying string to add to the file name. When you invoke one of the item filtering commands without a prefix argument and a corresponding file already exists, the command visits this file (if, for the current file or chosen files, there are multiple files of items filtered by regular expression, you are prompted to choose one). To force generation of a new filtered list, invoke the command with a prefix argument (in the case of top priority items, either numeric as described above, or the raw prefix argument @kbd{C-u} to use the values of @code{todo-top-priorities-overrides} or @code{todo-top-priorities}). Aside from explicitly invoking an item filtering command to display a saved list of items filtered by a given method from given todo files, there are two other ways to visit a saved file of filtered items: @table @kbd @item F f Visit a saved file of filtered items, which you choose via minibuffer completion (@code{todo-find-filtered-items-file}). @end table @itemize @bullet @item As with tables of categories, by customizing @code{todo-show-first} you can have the first invocation of @code{todo-show} for a given todo file display the corresponding saved file of filtered items. If there is no saved filtered items list for the file, @code{todo-show} simply defaults to visiting the file and displaying its first category, as usual. @end itemize The command @kbd{F k} (@pxref{File Editing}) is also available in Todo Filtered Items mode. It deletes the current filtered items file. @node Todo Display Features, Printing Todo Buffers, Todo Filtered Items Mode, Top @chapter Todo Display Features You can change the appearance of Todo mode buffers in a variety of ways. @menu * Faces:: * Item Prefix:: * Other Display Commands and Options:: @end menu @node Faces, Item Prefix, , Todo Display Features @section Faces Each of the Todo modes uses faces to distinguish various aspects of the display, both structural and informational. For example, the faces for the date and time strings of todo item headers by default inherit the attributes of the corresponding faces used by the Emacs diary; but when the date and time of a Todo diary item (i.e., an item lacking @code{todo-nondiary-marker}) is earlier than the current date and time, they are displayed in a different face. In this way, you can readily recognize diary items that have ``expired'' and act accordingly (e.g., by tagging them as done or by updating the deadlines). Another example of an informational face is the face used to distinguish top priority items. A third case is the face used in Todo Categories mode to mark rows of the table containing categories with only archived items. The @code{todo-faces} customization group contains a complete list of Todo mode faces and brief descriptions of their use. @node Item Prefix, Other Display Commands and Options, Faces, Todo Display Features @section Item Prefix In the default display of (real or virtual) categories in Todo mode, Todo Archive mode and Todo Filtered Item mode the items are visually numbered in ascending order, starting with @samp{1} on the top item, displayed to the left of its header (date/time string). With todo items the numbers indicate each item's priority in the list, so when you reprioritize an item with @kbd{#} or move it with @kbd{m}, these numbers make it easier to choose the item's new priority. The numbering also lets you to see at a glance how many items there are in the list. When an item is inserted, deleted, or moved, the numbering is automatically updated. In Todo mode, the todo and done items sections in each category are separately numbered. If you prefer not to have item numbering displayed, disable the option @code{todo-number-prefix}; then the display of each item starts by default simply with its header. But you can also replace the numbering with a visually distinctive string of your choice by customizing the option @code{todo-prefix} (the empty string by default). Another alternative is to temporarily hide the item numbering: @table @kbd @item F N @itemx N Toggle between displaying item numbering and displaying the @code{todo-prefix} string in the current Todo file (todo, archive, or saved virtual category of filtered items. This command also works in buffers of filtered items that have not yet been written to a file.) @end table In the todo items section of each Todo mode category, the item prefix (whether a priority number or a fixed string) of the top priority items (determined as specified in @pxref{Filtering Items}) is displayed in a different face from the prefix of the other items, so you see at a glance how many items in the category are top priorities. @node Other Display Commands and Options, , Item Prefix, Todo Display Features @section Other Display Commands and Options There are two additional toggle commands that affect display in the current file: @table @kbd @item F h @itemx h Hide the item headers if visible, or show them if they are hidden. With done items, only the done header (i.e. the done tag and date-time string inserted when the item was marked done) is hidden, the original date-time string is not. With filtered items, the category (or category-file) tag is not hidden. @item F H @itemx H Highlight the current item if unhighlighted, or remove its highlighting. When item highlighting is enabled, it follows navigation by @kbd{n} or @kbd{p}. If you want to have current item highlighting by default, enable the option @code{todo-highlight-item}. @kbd{F H} or @kbd{H} will still toggle it. @end table There are two options which affect the display of items whose content is longer than one screen line: @itemize @bullet{} @item @code{todo-indent-to-here} sets the amount of indentation for all lines after the first in multiline todo items, which is necessary in order for todo diary items to be fully visible in the Fancy Diary display. The default indentation is 3 spaces. For a uniform appearance this option applies to all items, i.e., diary and nondiary todo items and also done items. @item @code{todo-wrap-lines} allows you to choose, for the purposes of insertion and editing, between treating multiline todo items as containing multiple logical lines with hard line breaks or as multiple visual lines using Visual Line mode; the latter is the default. Since multiparagraph items also contain hard line breaks in Visual Line mode, for a uniform appearance this display shows indentation on wrapped lines by using a wrap-prefix of @code{todo-indent-to-here} spaces. @end itemize The indentation inserted after a hard newline is actually a tab character, and the Todo modes that display items bind @code{tab-width} to @code{todo-indent-to-here}, so if you change the default value of the latter, the next time you visit a Todo file, the indentation will reflect your change. By default, the todo and done items sections of a todo category are visually separated by a line as wide as the window the buffer is displayed in. You can change the appearance and width of the separator by customizing @code{todo-done-separator-string}; you can also change the face of the separator string. There are also several options for changing the appearance in Todo Categories mode and Todo Filtered Items mode, beyond those mentioned above in the sections on these modes; see the customization groups @code{todo-categories} and @code{todo-filtered} for details. @node Printing Todo Buffers, Legacy Todo Mode Files, Todo Display Features, Top @chapter Printing Todo Buffers If you print a Todo buffer using one of the standard Emacs printing commands, it does not look exactly like what you see in the buffer. This is because some of the display features are non-printable (specifically, those using overlays, word-wrap and wrap-prefix). Todo mode provides two print commands that produce output which includes printable counterparts of such display features: @table @kbd @item P B Send the printable buffer output directly to your printer. @item P F Prompt for a file name and write the printable output to that file. @end table By default, Todo uses @code{ps-print-buffer-with-faces} to make the printable version; you can change this by setting the option @code{todo-print-function}. @node Legacy Todo Mode Files, GNU Free Documentation License, Printing Todo Buffers, Top @chapter Legacy Todo Mode Files Users of the original version of Todo mode will recognize from the description in this user manual that, although the new version shares with the original version the same basic user interface and handling of todo items, there are some incompatible differences between them, such as the done items sections (there are also other file format incompatibilities behind the scenes that are normally not visible to users). The most significant incompatibility concerns the item prefix. In the earlier version of Todo mode the prefix was the initial part of the item string itself, so in order for the item to be displayable in the Emacs diary, the prefix had to be a date/time pattern recognizable by the diary (although the todo item also has its own date/time header). Moreover, since all items had the same prefix string in the original version, this means that either only all or no items could appear in the Fancy Diary display on any given date. This considerably restricts the practicality of including todo items in the diary. In contrast, the current version of Todo mode uses overlays for item priority numbering or prefixes, and item-specific diary-compatible date/time headers and special marks for todo items to be excluded from the diary, so you can determine for each item whether and when it appears in the Fancy Diary display. Due to these incompatibilities, files created with the original version of Todo mode cannot be displayed or edited with the current version. However, this version provides a function that converts the two main types of files used by the original version into new-style valid todo and archive files, respectively, and saves them in @code{todo-directory}.@footnote{The original version of Todo mode also allowed saving a file of top priority items, but since you can readily create such a file with the new version, which is also more flexible, no conversion is provided for this file.} This conversion function is automatically called the first time you invoke @code{todo-show} (i.e., before you have created a todo file with the new version), and if it finds the old-style files, it offers to convert them, making them the first new-style todo and archive files. If you choose not to convert the old-style files at this time, you can do so later by invoking the command @code{todo-convert-legacy-files} (there is no key binding for it, since it shouldn't be necessary to use it often). (A delicate part of the conversion concerns the customizable format of item date/time headers in the old-style; see the documentation string of @code{todo-todo-mode-date-time-regexp} for details.) @node GNU Free Documentation License, , Legacy Todo Mode Files, Top @appendix GNU Free Documentation License @include doclicense.texi @bye @c End: