Add and search Todoist tasks straight from Alfred. It uses Todoist stable v1
REST API.
Getting started | Installation | Configuration | Usage | Contributing |
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For this workflow to work you need:
3.x
or 4.x
and a powerpack licence.10.x
or upNote that the workflow expects node to be installed in the default location(s), i.e. /usr/local/bin
or /usr/bin
. See installation notes below on how to make the workflow work with non-standard node installations.
Download and import workflow.
If you have installed node.js in a non-standard way (e.g. through nvm or homebrew), you may need to do either of the following to make the workflow work:
Create symlink to current node version:
cd /usr/local/bin
ln -s $(which node) node
(note, if you're using a different shell - fish, zsh, etc. - you may need to make slight changes to make the command work).This method should work with different versions of nvm (including changing to other versions), as long as you don't remove the symlinked node version (or the symlink itself of course).
The downside is having problems switching between versions because most processes will default to the symlinked version.
Manually add node path to the workflow:
which node
/Users/{user}/.nvm/versions/node/v11.6.0/bin
, not
/Users/{user}/.nvm/versions/node/v11.6.0/bin/node
)/Users/{user}/.nvm/versions/node/v11.6.0/bin:
Observe, variable will have to be updated whenever node version changes.
If you need to enable any node.js command-line flags, you can with
--experimental-worker --experimental-modules
If the workflow doesn't work as expected, perform the following to get a clue about the issue:
If the error messages outputs node errors, either make sure you have the appropriate node version or follow the steps above to enable the workflow with a non-standard node installation.
Name | Notation | Explanation |
---|---|---|
token | ^[0-9a-fA-F]{40}$ (default empty) |
The todoist API token. |
language | en , da , pl , zh , ko , de , pt , ja , it , fr , sv , ru , es , nl (default en ) |
The language for natural language date processing (by todoist) and to calculate time to complete a task. |
cache_timeout | A positive number (default 3600 , an hour) |
The time (in seconds) until the cache is refreshed (until that time todoist information is stored locally to make things a little faster) |
anonymous_statistics | true or false (default true ) |
Doesn't do much at the moment but I intent to use it to track installs |
todo:setting token {api token}
Example: todo:setting token 2d2e2a334c5f36e7a7c43b46e
todo:setting language {language}
Example: todo:setting language nl
todo:setting cache_timeout {time in seconds}
Example: todo:setting cache_timeout 13
todo:setting anonymous_statistics {true or false}
Example: todo:setting anonymous_statistics false
Name | Notation | Explanation |
---|---|---|
task | Any text except , |
The task title. |
date | A date string | See the Todoist documentation for supported date formats. |
project | Either #personal or #[next actions] |
Use either the hashtag notation or bracket notation if the project name has spaces in it. The project name is case sensitive. |
label | @label |
Label names can't contain any whitespace characters. Labels are case insensitive. |
priority | Either p2 or !!2 |
A value between 1 (urgent) and 4 (normal) |
todos {query}
Any search query one character or longer. Uses fuzzy search to find the tasks.
Example: todos car
=> returns (because of fuzzy search):
todo {task}, {date}
Example: todo Get things done, tomorrow @ 9 Example: todo Build tree house #home !!2 @15min, tomorrow @ 9
Important
For date parsing the work the date needs to be the only thing after the comma.
The reason for this is that multilanguage date string parsing is hard, and Todoist has already solved this problem. But in order to have Todoist read the date the workflow needs to present it a string that holds just the date. The workflow does this by having the date string between a comma and the end of the string.
Read the docs.
View CHANGELOG.md
Fork and clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/YOUR-USERNAME/alfred-worflow-todoist
Install dependencies
npm install
Symlink to project workflow folder
npm run setup:dev
Create a new build with
npm run build
Create a distributable package (.alfredworkflow) after the build step with
npm run build:workflow
Run Jest test suite with:
npm run test
npm run test:prod
Or run a watcher with
npm run test:watch
For commits I follow the angular commit guidelines
and use semantic release
to automate builds, semver version updates and changelog creation. The way to make sure this all works is to run:
npm run commit
Which guides you through the motions
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