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task(1) |
User Manuals |
task(1) |
task - A command line todo manager.
task <filter> <command> [ <mods> | <args> ]
task --version
Taskwarrior is a command line todo list manager. It maintains a list of tasks
that you want to do, allowing you to add/remove, and otherwise manipulate
them. Taskwarrior has a rich set of subcommands that allow you to do various
things with it.
At the core, Taskwarrior is a list processing program. You add
text and additional related parameters and redisplay the information in a
nice way. It turns into a todo list program when you add due dates and
recurrence. It turns into an organized todo list program when you add
priorities, tags (one word descriptors), project groups, etc.
The <filter> consists of zero or more search criteria that select tasks.
For example, to list all pending tasks belonging to the 'Home' project:
task project:Home list
You can specify multiple filter terms, each of which further
restricts the result:
task project:Home +weekend garden list
This example applies three filters: the 'Home' project, the
'weekend' tag, and the description or annotations must contain the character
sequence 'garden'. In this example, 'garden' is translated internally
to:
description.contains:garden
as a convenient shortcut. The 'contains' here is an attribute
modifier, which is used to exert more control over the filter than simply
absence or presence. See the section 'ATTRIBUTE MODIFIERS' below for a
complete list of modifiers.
Note that a filter may have zero terms, which means that all tasks
apply to the command. This can be dangerous, and this special case is
confirmed, and cannot be overridden. For example, this command:
task modify +work
This command has no filter, and will modify all tasks. Are you sure?
(yes/no)
will add the 'work' tag to all tasks, but only after
confirmation.
More filter examples:
task <command> <mods>
task 28 <command> <mods>
task +weekend <command> <mods>
task +bills due.by:eom <command> <mods>
task project:Home due.before:today <command> <mods>
task ebeeab00-ccf8-464b-8b58-f7f2d606edfb <command> <mods>
By default filter elements are combined with an implicit 'and'
operator, but 'or' and 'xor' may also be used, provided parentheses are
included:
task '( /[Cc]at|[Dd]og/ or /[0-9]+/ )' <command> <mods>
The parentheses isolate the logical term from any default command
filter or implicit report filter which would be combined with an implicit
'and'.
A filter may target specific tasks using ID or UUID numbers. To
specify multiple tasks use one of these forms (space-separated list of ID
numbers, UUID numbers or ID ranges):
task 1 2 3 delete
task 1-3 info
task 1 2-5 19 modify pri:H
task 4-7 ebeeab00-ccf8-464b-8b58-f7f2d606edfb info
Note that it may be necessary to properly escape special
characters as well as quotes in order to avoid their special meanings in the
shell. See also the section 'SPECIFYING DESCRIPTIONS' for more
information.
The <mods> consist of zero or more changes to apply to the selected tasks,
such as:
task <filter> <command> project:Home
task <filter> <command> +weekend +garden due:tomorrow
task <filter> <command> Description/annotation text
task <filter> <command> /from/to/ <- replace first match
task <filter> <command> /from/to/g <- replace all matches
Taskwarrior supports different kinds of commands. There are read commands, write
commands, miscellaneous commands and script helper commands. Read commands do
not allow modification of tasks. Write commands can alter almost any aspect of
a task. Script helper commands are provided to help you write add-on scripts,
for example, shell completion (only minimal output is generated, as with
verbose=nothing). Those commands which are explicitly affected by the
context are denoted as such.
Reports are read subcommands. There are several reports currently predefined in
Taskwarrior. The output and sort behavior of these reports can be configured
in the configuration file. See also the man page taskrc(5). There are also
other read subcommands that are not reports.
- task --version
- This is the only conventional command line argument that Taskwarrior
supports, and is intended for add-on scripts to verify the version number
of an installed Taskwarrior without invoking the mechanisms that create
default files.
- task <filter>
- With no command specified, the default command is run, and the filter
applied.
- task <filter> active
- Shows all tasks matching the filter that are started but not completed.
- task <filter> all
- Shows all tasks matching the filter, including parents of recurring tasks.
- task <filter> blocked
- Shows all tasks matching the filter, that are currently blocked by other
tasks.
- task <filter> blocking
- Shows all tasks matching the filter, that block other tasks.
- task <filter> burndown.daily
- Shows a graphical burndown chart, by day. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> burndown.weekly
- Shows a graphical burndown chart, by week. Note that 'burndown' is an
alias to the 'burndown.weekly' report. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> burndown.monthly
- Shows a graphical burndown chart, by month. Is affected by the context.
- task calendar [due|<month> <year>|<year>]
[y]
- Shows a monthly calendar with due tasks marked. Shows one horizontal line
of months. If the 'y' argument is provided, will show at least one
complete year. If a year is provided, such as '2015', then that full year
is shown. If both a month and a year are specified ('6 2015') then the
months displayed begin at the specified month and year. If the 'due'
argument is provided, will show the starting month of the earliest due
task.
- task colors [<sample> | legend]
- Displays all possible colors, a named sample, or a legend containing all
currently defined colors.
- task columns [<substring>]
- Displays all supported columns and formatting styles. Useful when creating
custom reports. If a substring is provided, only matching column names are
shown.
- task commands
- Shows all the supported commands, with some details of each.
- task <filter> completed
- Shows all tasks matching the filter that are completed.
- task <filter> count
- Displays only a count of tasks matching the filter. Is affected by the
context.
- task <filter> export
- Exports all tasks in the JSON format. Redirect the output to a file, if
you wish to save it, or pipe it to another command or script to convert it
to another format. You'll find these example scripts online at
<https://taskwarrior.org/tools/>:
export-csv.pl
export-sql.py
export-xml.py
export-yaml.pl
export-html.pl
export-tsv.pl
export-xml.rb
export-ical.pl
export-xml.pl
export-yad.pl
- task <filter> ghistory.annual
- Shows a graphical report of task status by year.
- task <filter> ghistory.monthly
- Shows a graphical report of task status by month. Note that 'ghistory' is
an alias to 'ghistory.monthly'.
- task <filter> ghistory.weekly
- Shows a graphical report of task status by week.
- task <filter> ghistory.daily
- Shows a graphical report of task status by day.
- task help
- Shows the long usage text.
- task <filter> history.annual
- Shows a report of task history by year. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> history.monthly
- Shows a report of task history by month. Note that 'history' is an alias
to 'history.monthly'. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> history.weekly
- Shows a report of task history by week. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> history.daily
- Shows a report of task history by day. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> ids
- Applies the filter then extracts only the task IDs and presents them as a
space-separated list. This is useful as input to a task command, to
achieve this:
task $(task project:Home ids) modify priority:H
This example first gets the IDs for the project:Home filter,
then sets the priority to H for each of those tasks. This can also be
achieved directly:
task project:Home modify priority:H
This command is mainly of use to external scripts.
- task <filter> uuids
- Applies the filter on all tasks (even deleted and completed tasks) then
extracts only the task UUIDs and presents them as a space-separated list.
This is useful as input to a task command, to achieve this:
task $(task project:Home status:completed uuids) modify
status:pending
This example first gets the UUIDs for the project:Home and
status:completed filters, then makes each of those tasks pending
again.
This command is mainly of use to external scripts.
- task udas
- Shows a list of UDAs that are defined, including their name, type, label
and allowed values. Also shows UDA usage and any orphan UDAs.
- task <filter> information
- Shows all data and metadata for the specified tasks. This is the only
means of displaying all aspects of a given task, including the change
history.
- task <filter> list
- Provides a standard listing of tasks matching the filter.
- task <filter> long
- Provides the most detailed listing of tasks matching the filter.
- task <filter> ls
- Provides a short listing of tasks matching the filter.
- task <filter> minimal
- Provides a minimal listing of tasks matching the filter.
- task <filter> newest
- Shows the newest tasks matching the filter.
- task <filter> next
- Shows a page of the most urgent tasks, sorted by urgency, which is a
calculated value.
- task <filter> ready
- Shows a page of the most urgent ready tasks, sorted by urgency with
started tasks first. A ready task is one that is either unscheduled, or
has a scheduled date that is past and is not waiting.
- task <filter> oldest
- Shows the oldest tasks matching the filter.
- task <filter> overdue
- Shows all incomplete tasks matching the filter that are beyond their due
date.
- task <filter> projects
- Lists all project names that are currently used by pending tasks, and the
number of tasks for each. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> recurring
- Shows all recurring tasks matching the filter.
- task <filter> unblocked
- Shows all tasks that are not currently blocked by other tasks, matching
the filter.
- task <filter> waiting
- Shows all waiting tasks matching the filter.
- task add <mods>
- Adds a new pending task to the task list. It is affected by the currently
set context.
- task <filter> annotate <mods>
- Adds an annotation to an existing task.
- task <filter> append <mods>
- Appends description text to an existing task.
- task <filter> delete <mods>
- Deletes the specified task from task list. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> denotate <mods>
- Deletes an annotation for the specified task. If the provided description
matches an annotation exactly, the corresponding annotation is deleted. If
the provided description matches annotations partly, the first partly
matched annotation is deleted. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> done <mods>
- Marks the specified task as done. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> duplicate <mods>
- Duplicates the specified task and allows modifications. Is affected by the
context.
- task <filter> edit
- Launches a text editor to let you modify all aspects of a task directly.
In general, this is not the recommended method of modifying tasks, but is
provided for exceptional circumstances. Use carefully. Is affected by the
context.
- task import [<file> ...]
- Imports tasks in the JSON format. Can be used to add new tasks, or update
existing ones. Tasks are identified by their UUID.
If no file or "-" is specified, import tasks from
STDIN.
Setting rc.recurrence.confirmation to an appropriate level is
recommended if import is to be used in automated workflows. See
taskrc(5).
For importing other file formats, the standard task release
comes with a few example scripts, such as:
import-todo.sh.pl
import-yaml.pl
- task log <mods>
- Adds a new task that is already completed, to the task list. It is
affected by the currently set context.
- task <filter> modify <mods>
- Modifies the existing task with provided information.
- task <filter> prepend <mods>
- Prepends description text to an existing task. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> purge
- Permanently removes the specified tasks from the data files. Only tasks
that are already deleted can be purged. This command has a local-only
effect and changes introduced by it are not synced. Is affected by the
context.
Warning: causes permanent, non-revertible loss of data.
- task <filter> start <mods>
- Marks the specified tasks as started. Is affected by the context.
- task <filter> stop <mods>
- Removes the start time from the specified task. Is affected by the
context.
Miscellaneous subcommands either accept no command line arguments, or accept
non-standard arguments.
- task calc <expression>
- Evaluates an algebraic expression. Can be used to test how Taskwarrior
parses and evaluates the expression given on the command line.
Examples:
task calc 1 + 1
2
task calc now + 8d
2015-03-26T18:06:57
task calc eom
2015-03-31T23:59:59
- task config [<name> [<value> | '']]
- Add, modify and remove settings directly in the Taskwarrior configuration.
This command either modifies the 'name' setting with a new value of
'value', or adds a new entry that is equivalent to 'name=value':
task config name value
This command sets a blank value. This has the effect of
suppressing any default value:
task config name ''
Finally, this command removes any 'name=...' entry from the
.taskrc file:
task config name
- task context <name>
- Sets the currently active context. See the CONTEXT section.
Example:
task context work
- task context delete <name>
- Deletes the context with the name <name>. If the context being
deleted is currently set as active, it will be unset.
Example:
task context delete work
- task context define <name> <filter>
- Defines a new context with name <name> and definition
<filter>. This command does not affect the currently set context,
just adds a new context definition.
Examples:
task context define work project:Work
task context define home project:Home or +home
task context define superurgent due:today and +urgent
- task context list
- Outputs a list of available contexts along with their definitions.
- task context none
- Clears the currently active context, if any was set.
- task context show
- Shows the currently active context, along with its definition.
- task diagnostics
- Shows diagnostic information, of the kind needed when reporting a problem.
When you report a bug, it is likely that the platform, version, and
environment are important. Running this command generates a summary of
similar information that should accompany a bug report.
It includes compiler, library and software information. It
does not include any personal information, other than the location and
size of your task data files.
This command also performs a diagnostic scan of your data
files looking for common problems, such as duplicate UUIDs.
- task execute <external command>
- Executes the specified command. Not useful by itself, but when used in
conjunction with aliases and extensions can provide seamless integration.
- task logo
- Displays the Taskwarrior logo.
- task news
- Guides the user through important release notes anytime a new version of
Taskwarrior is installed. It provides personalized feedback, deprecation
warnings and usage advice, where applicable.
- task reports
- Lists all supported reports. This includes the built-in reports, and any
custom reports you have defined.
- task show [all | <substring>]
- Shows all the current settings. If a substring is specified just the
settings containing that substring will be displayed.
- task <filter> stats
- Shows statistics of the tasks defined by the filter. Is affected by the
context.
- task <filter> summary
- Shows a report of aggregated task status by project. Is affected by the
context.
- task sync [init]
- The sync command synchronizes data with the Taskserver, if configured.
The init subcommand should only ever be run once, and only on
one client, because it sends all data to the Taskserver. This allows all
the subsequent sync commands to only send small deltas.
Note: If you use multiple sync clients, make sure this setting
(which is the default) is on your primary client:
recurrence=on
and on all other clients (this is not the default):
recurrence=off
This is a workaround to avoid a recurrence bug that duplicates
recurring tasks.
- task <filter> tags
- Show a list of all tags used. Any special tags used are highlighted. Note
that virtual tags are not listed - they don't really exist, and are just a
convenient notation for other task metadata. It is an error to attempt to
add or remove a virtual tag. Is affected by the context.
- task timesheet [<weeks>]
- Shows a weekly report of tasks completed and started.
- task undo
- Reverts the most recent action. Obeys the confirmation setting.
- task version
- Shows the Taskwarrior version number.
- task _aliases
- Generates a list of all aliases, for autocompletion purposes.
- task _columns
- Displays only a list of supported columns.
- task _commands
- Generates a list of all commands, for autocompletion purposes.
- task _config
- Lists all supported configuration variables, for completion purposes.
- task _context
- Lists all available context variables, for completion purposes.
- task <filter> _ids
- Shows only the IDs of matching tasks, in the form of a list. Deprecated in
favor of _unique.
- task _show
- Shows the combined defaults and overrides of the configuration settings,
for use by third-party applications.
- task <filter> _unique <attribute>
- Reports a unique set of attribute values. For example, to see all the
active projects:
task +PENDING _unique project
- task <filter> _uuids
- Shows only the UUIDs of matching tasks among all tasks (even deleted and
completed tasks), in the form of a list. Deprecated in favor of _unique.
- task _udas
- Shows only defined UDA names, in the form of a list.
- task <filter> _projects
- Shows only a list of all project names used. Deprecated in favor of
_unique.
- task <filter> _tags
- Shows only a list of all tags used, for autocompletion purposes.
Deprecated in favor of _unique.
- task <filter> _urgency
- Displays the urgency measure of a task.
- task _version
- Shows only the Taskwarrior version number.
- task _zshcommands
- Generates a list of all commands, for zsh autocompletion purposes.
- task <filter> _zshids
- Shows the IDs and descriptions of matching tasks.
- task <filter> _zshuuids
- Shows the UUIDs and descriptions of matching tasks.
- task _get <DOM> [<DOM> ...]
- Accesses and displays the DOM reference(s). Used to extract individual
values from tasks, or the system. Supported DOM references are:
rc.<name>
tw.syncneeded
tw.program
tw.args
tw.width
tw.height
tw.version
context.program (Deprecated in 2.6.0)
context.args (Deprecated in 2.6.0)
context.width (Deprecated in 2.6.0)
context.height (Deprecated in 2.6.0)
system.version
system.os
<id>.<attribute>
<uuid>.<attribute>
Note that the 'rc.<name>' reference may need to be
escaped using '--' to prevent the reference from being interpreted as an
override.
Note that if the DOM reference is not valid, or the reference
evaluates to a missing value, the command exits with 1.
Additionally, some components of the attributes of particular
types may be extracted by DOM references.
$ task _get 2.due.year
2015
For a full list of supported attribute-specific DOM
references, consult the online documentation at:
<https://taskwarrior.org/docs/dom.html>
- ID
- Tasks can be specified uniquely by IDs, which are simply the indexes of
the tasks in the data file. The ID of a task may therefore change, but
only when a command is run that displays IDs. When modifying tasks, it is
safe to rely on the last displayed ID. Always run a report to check you
have the right ID for a task. IDs can be given to task as a sequence, for
example,
task 1,4-10,19 delete
- +tag|-tag
- Tags are arbitrary words associated with a task. Use + to add a tag and -
to remove a tag from a task. A task can have any quantity of tags.
Certain tags (called 'special tags'), can be used to affect
the way tasks are treated. For example, if a task has the special tag
'nocolor', then it is exempt from all color rules. The supported special
tags are:
+nocolor Disable color rules processing for this task
+nonag Completion of this task suppresses all nag messages
+nocal This task will not appear on the calendar
+next Elevates task so it appears on 'next' report
There are also virtual tags, which represent task metadata in
tag form. These tags do not exist, but can be used to filter tasks. The
supported virtual tags are:
ACTIVE Matches if the task is started
ANNOTATED Matches if the task has annotations
BLOCKED Matches if the task is blocked
BLOCKING Matches if the task is blocking
CHILD Matches if the task has a parent (deprecated in 2.6.0)
COMPLETED Matches if the task has completed status
DELETED Matches if the task has deleted status
DUE Matches if the task is due
INSTANCE Matches if the task is a recurrent instance
LATEST Matches if the task is the newest added task
MONTH Matches if the task is due this month
ORPHAN Matches if the task has any orphaned UDA values
OVERDUE Matches if the task is overdue
PARENT Matches if the task is a parent (deprecated in 2.6.0)
PENDING Matches if the task has pending status
PRIORITY Matches if the task has a priority
PROJECT Matches if the task has a project
QUARTER Matches if the task is due this quarter
READY Matches if the task is actionable
SCHEDULED Matches if the task is scheduled
TAGGED Matches if the task has tags
TEMPLATE Matches if the task is a recurrence template
TODAY Matches if the task is due today
TOMORROW Matches if the task is due sometime tomorrow
UDA Matches if the task has any UDA values
UNBLOCKED Matches if the task is not blocked
UNTIL Matches if the task expires
WAITING Matches if the task is waiting
WEEK Matches if the task is due this week
YEAR Matches if the task is due this year
YESTERDAY Matches if the task was due sometime yesterday
You can use +BLOCKED to filter blocked tasks, or -BLOCKED for
unblocked tasks. Similarly, -BLOCKED is equivalent to +UNBLOCKED. It is
an error to attempt to add or remove a virtual tag.
- project:<project-name>
- Specifies the project to which a task is related to.
- priority:H|M|L or priority:
- Specifies High, Medium, Low and no priority for a task.
- due:<due-date>
- Specifies the due-date of a task.
- recur:<frequency>
- Specifies the frequency of a recurrence of a task.
- scheduled:<ready-date>
- Specifies the date after which a task can be accomplished.
- until:<expiration date of task>
- Specifies the expiration date of a task, after which it will be deleted.
- limit:<number-of-rows>
- Specifies the desired number of tasks a report should show, if a positive
integer is given. The value 'page' may also be used, and will limit the
report output to as many lines of text as will fit on screen. This
defaults to 25 lines.
- wait:<wait-date>
- When a task is given a wait date, it is hidden from most built-in reports,
which exclude +WAITING. When the date is in the past, the task is not
considered +WAITING, and again becomes visible. Note that, for
compatibilty, such tasks are shown as having status "waiting",
but this will change in a future release.
- depends:<id1,id2 ...>
- Declares this task to be dependent on id1 and id2. This means that the
tasks id1 and id2 should be completed before this task. Consequently, this
task will then show up on the 'blocked' report. It accepts a
comma-separated list of ID numbers, UUID numbers and ID ranges. When
prefixing any element of this list by '-', the specified tasks are removed
from the dependency list.
- entry:<entry-date>
- For report purposes, specifies the date that a task was created.
Attribute modifiers improve filters. Supported modifiers are:
before (synonyms under, below)
after (synonyms over, above)
by
none
any
is (synonym equals)
isnt (synonym not)
has (synonym contains)
hasnt
startswith (synonym left)
endswith (synonym right)
word
noword
They can be applied to all regular attributes (see above) and the
following calculated attributes:
urgency (or short urg)
For example:
task due.before:eom priority.not:L list
The before modifier is used to compare values, preserving
semantics, so project.before:B list all projects that begin with 'A'.
Priority 'L' is before 'M', and due:2011-01-01 is before due:2011-01-02. The
synonyms 'under' and 'below' are included to allow filters that read more
naturally.
The after modifier is the inverse of the before
modifier.
The by modifier is the same as 'before', except it also
includes the moment in question. For example:
task add test due:eoy
will be found when using the inclusive filter 'by':
task due.by:eoy
but not when the non-inclusive filter 'before' is used:
task due.before:eoy
this applies equally to other named dates such as 'eom', 'eod',
etc; the modifier compares using '<=' rather than '<' like 'before'
does.
The none modifier requires that the attribute does not have
a value. For example:
task priority: list
task priority.none: list
are equivalent, and list tasks that do not have a priority.
The any modifier requires that the attribute has a value,
but any value will suffice.
The is modifier requires an exact match with the value.
The isnt modifier is the inverse of the is
modifier.
The has modifier is used to search for a substring, such
as:
task description.has:foo list
task foo list
These are equivalent and will return any task that has 'foo' in
the description or annotations.
The hasnt modifier is the inverse of the has
modifier.
The startswith modifier matches against the left, or
beginning of an attribute, such that:
task project.startswith:H list
task project:H list
are equivalent and will match any project starting with 'H'.
Matching all projects not starting with 'H' is done with:
task project.not:H list
The endswith modifier matches against the right, or end of
an attribute.
The word modifier requires that the attribute contain the
whole word specified, such that this:
task description.word:bar list
Will match the description 'foo bar baz' but does not match 'dog
food'.
The noword modifier is the inverse of the word
modifier.
You can use the following operators in filter expressions:
and or xor ! Logical operators
< <= = == != !== >= > Relational operators
( ) Precedence
For example:
task due.before:eom priority.not:L list
task '( due < eom or priority != L )' list
task '! ( project:Home or project:Garden )' list
The = operator tests for approximate equality. Dates
compare equal if they are on the same day (hour and minutes are ignored).
Strings compare equal if the left operand starts with the right operand. The
== operator tests for exact equality. The != and !==
operators are the negation of = and == respectively. The
negation operator is !.
Note that the parentheses are required when using a logical
operator other than the 'and' operator. The reason is that some reports
contain filters that must be combined with the command line. Consider this
example:
task project:Home or project:Garden list
While this looks correct, it is not. The 'list' report contains a
filter of:
task show report.list.filter
Config Variable Value
----------------- --------------
report.list.filter status:pending
Which means the example is really:
task status:pending project:Home or project:Garden list
The implied 'and' operator makes it:
task status:pending and project:Home or project:Garden list
This is a precedence error - the 'and' and 'or' need to be grouped
using parentheses, like this:
task status:pending and ( project:Home or project:Garden ) list
The original example therefore must be entered as:
task '( project:Home or project:Garden )' list
This includes quotes to escape the parentheses, so that the shell
doesn't interpret them and hide them from Taskwarrior.
There is redundancy between operators, attribute modifiers and
other syntactic sugar. For example, the following are all equivalent:
task foo list
task /foo/ list
task description.contains:foo list
task description.has:foo list
task 'description ~ foo' list
Taskwarrior reads dates from the command line and displays dates in the reports.
The expected and desired date format is determined by the configuration
variable dateformat
- Exact specification
- task ... due:7/14/2008
- ISO-8601
- task ... due:2013-03-14T22:30:00Z
- Relative wording
- task ... due:now
task ... due:today
task ... due:yesterday
task ... due:tomorrow
- Day number with ordinal
- task ... due:23rd
task ... due:3wks
task ... due:1day
task ... due:9hrs
- Start of next (work) week (Monday), calendar week (Sunday or Monday),
month, quarter and year
-
task ... due:sow
task ... due:soww
task ... due:socw
task ... due:som
task ... due:soq
task ... due:soy
- End of current (work) week (Friday), calendar week (Saturday or Sunday),
month, quarter and year
-
task ... due:eow
task ... due:eoww
task ... due:eocw
task ... due:eom
task ... due:eoq
task ... due:eoy
- At some point or later
-
task ... wait:later
task ... wait:someday
This sets the wait date to 12/30/9999.
- Next occurring weekday
- task ... due:fri
- Predictable holidays
- task ... due:goodfriday
task ... due:easter
task ... due:eastermonday
task ... due:ascension
task ... due:pentecost
task ... due:midsommar
task ... due:midsommarafton
task ... due:juhannus
Recurrence periods. Taskwarrior supports several ways of specifying the
frequency of recurring tasks.
- daily, day, 1da, 2da, ...
- Every day or a number of days.
- weekdays
- Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays and skipping weekend
days.
- weekly, 1wk, 2wks, ...
- Every week or a number of weeks.
- biweekly, fortnight
- Every two weeks.
- monthly, month, 1mo, 2mo, ...
- Every month.
- quarterly, 1qtr, 2qtrs, ...
- Every three months, a quarter, or a number of quarters.
- semiannual
- Every six months.
- annual, yearly, 1yr, 2yrs, ...
- Every year or a number of years.
- biannual, biyearly, 2yr
- Every two years.
Context is a user-defined query, which is automatically applied to all commands
that filter the task list and to commands that create new tasks (add, log).
For example, any report command will have its result affected by the current
active context. Here is a list of the commands that are affected:
-
add
burndown
count
delete
denotate
done
duplicate
edit
history
log
prepend
projects
purge
start
stats
stop
summary
tags
All other commands are NOT affected by the context.
$ task list
ID Age Project Description Urg
1 2d Sport Run 5 miles 1.42
2 1d Home Clean the dishes 1.14
$ task context home
Context 'home' set. Use 'task context none' to remove.
$ task list
ID Age Project Description Urg
2 1d Home Clean the dishes 1.14
Context 'home' set. Use 'task context none' to remove.
Task list got automatically filtered for project:Home.
$ task add Vaccuum the carpet
Created task 3.
Context 'home' set. Use 'task context none' to remove.
$ task list
ID Age Project Description Urg
2 1d Home Clean the dishes 1.14
3 5s Home Vaccuum the carpet 1.14
Context 'home' set. Use 'task context none' to remove.
Note that the newly added task "Vaccuum the carpet"
has "project:Home" set automatically.
As seen in the example above, context is applied by specifying
its name to the "context" command. To change the currently
applied context, just pass the new context's name to the 'context'
command.
To unset any context, use the 'none' subcommand.
$ task context none
Context unset.
$ task list
ID Age Project Description Urg
1 2d Sport Run 5 miles 1.42
2 1d Home Clean the dishes 1.14
3 7s Home Vaccuum the carpet 1.14
Context can be defined using the 'define' subcommand,
specifying both the name of the new context, and it's assigned
filter.
$ task context define home project:Home
Are you sure you want to add 'context.home.read' with a value of
'project:Home'? (yes/no) yes
Are you sure you want to add 'context.home.write' with a value of
'project:Home'? (yes/no) yes
Context 'home' successfully defined.
Note that you were separately prompted to set the 'read' and
'write' context. This allows you to specify contexts that only work for
reporting commands or only for commands that create tasks.
To remove the definition, use the 'delete' subcommand.
$ task context delete home
Are you sure you want to remove 'context.home.read'? (yes/no) yes
Are you sure you want to remove 'context.home.write'? (yes/no) yes
Context 'home' deleted.
To check what is the currently active context, use the 'show'
subcommand.
$ task context show
Context 'home' with
* read filter: '+home'
* write filter: '+home'
is currently applied.
Contexts can store arbitrarily complex filters.
$ task context define family project:Family or +paul or +nancy
Are you sure you want to add 'context.family.read' with a value of
'project:Family or +paul or +nancy'? (yes/no) yes
Are you sure you want to add 'context.family.write' with a value of
'project:Family or +paul or +nancy'? (yes/no) no
Context 'family' successfully defined.
Contexts are permanent, and the currently set context name is
stored in the "context" configuration variable. The context
definition is stored in the "context.<name>.read"
configuration variable (for reporting commands) and
"context.<name>.write" configuration variable (for task
additions, i.e. task add/log).
Note that in the example above, the user decided not to define
the complex filter as writeable context. The reason for this decision is
that the complex filter in the example does not directly translate to a
modification. In fact, if such a context is used as a writeable context,
the following happens:
$ task add Call Paul
Created task 4.
Context 'family' set. Use 'task context none' to remove.
$ task 4 list
ID Age Project Tags Description Urg
4 9min Family nancy paul or or Call Paul 0
There is no clear mapping between the complex filter used and
the modifications (should only the project be set? only the tags?
both?). Additionally note the 'or' operators being present in the
description. Taskwarrior does not try to guess the user intention here,
and instead, the user is expected to set the
"context.<name>.write" variable to make their intention
explicit, for example:
$ task config context.family.write project:Family
Are you sure you want to change the value of 'context.family.write' from
'project:Family or +paul or +nancy' to 'project:Family'? (yes/no) yes
Config file /home/tbabej/.config/task/taskrc modified.
$ task context
Name Type Definition Active
family read project:Family or +paul or +nancy yes
write project:Family yes
home read +home no
write +home no
Note how read and write contexts differ for context
"family", while for context "home" they stay the
same.
In addition, every configuration parameter can be overridden
for the current context, by specifying
context.<name>.rc.<parameter>. For example, if the default
command for the family context should be displaying the
family_report:
$ task config context.family.rc.default.command family_report
All Taskwarrior commands may be abbreviated as long as a unique prefix is used,
for example:
$ task li
is an unambiguous abbreviation for
$ task list
but
$ task l
could be list, ls or long.
Note that you can restrict the minimum abbreviation size using the
configuration setting:
abbreviation.minimum=3
Some task descriptions need to be escaped because of the shell and the special
meaning of some characters to the shell. This can be done either by adding
quotes to the description or escaping the special character:
$ task add "quoted ' quote"
$ task add escaped \' quote
The argument -- (a double dash) tells Taskwarrior to treat all
other args as description:
$ task add -- project:Home needs scheduling
In other situations, the shell sees spaces and breaks up
arguments. For example, this command:
$ task 123 modify /from this/to that/
is broken up into several arguments, which is corrected with
quotes:
$ task 123 modify "/from this/to that/"
It is sometimes necessary to force the shell to pass quotes to
Taskwarrior intact, so you can use:
$ task add project:\'Three Word Project\'
description
Taskwarrior supports Unicode using only the UTF8 encoding, with no
Byte Order Marks in the data files.
Taskwarrior stores its configuration in a file in the user's home directory:
~/.taskrc. The default configuration file can be overridden with:
- task rc:<path-to-alternate-file> ...
- Specifies an alternate configuration file with highest priority.
- TASKRC=<path-to-alternate-file> task ..
- The environment variable specifies an alternate configuration file to use.
- XDG_CONFIG_HOME=<path-to-alternate-config-home> task ..
- The environment variable specifies an alternate configuration file to use.
- task rc.<name>:<value> ...
- task rc.<name>=<value> ... Specifies individual
configuration file overrides.
- TASKDATA=/tmp/.task task ...
- The environment variable overrides the default, and the 'data.location'
configuration setting of the task data directory.
For examples please see the online documentation starting at
<https://taskwarrior.org/docs>
Note that the online documentation can be more detailed and more
current than this man page.
- ~/.taskrc
- User configuration file - see also taskrc(5). Note that this can be
overridden on the command line or by the TASKRC environment variable.
Also, if ~/.taskrc doesn't exist and XDG_CONFIG_HOME environment
variable is defined, taskwarrior will check if
$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/task/taskrc exists and attempt to read it
- ~/.task
- The default directory where task stores its data files. The location can
be configured in the configuration variable 'data.location', or overridden
with the TASKDATA environment variable..
- ~/.task/pending.data
- The file that contains the tasks that are not yet done.
- ~/.task/completed.data
- The file that contains the completed ("done") tasks.
- ~/.task/undo.data
- The file that contains information needed by the "undo" command.
Copyright (C) 2006 - 2021 T. Babej, P. Beckingham, F. Hernandez.
Taskwarrior is distributed under the MIT license. See
https://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php for more
information.
taskrc(5), task-color(5), task-sync(5)
For more information regarding Taskwarrior, see the following:
- The official site at
- <https://taskwarrior.org>
- The official code repository at
- <https://github.com/GothenburgBitFactory/taskwarrior>
- You can contact the project by emailing
- <support@GothenburgBitFactory.org>
- Bugs in Taskwarrior may be reported to the issue-tracker at
- <https://github.com/GothenburgBitFactory/taskwarrior/issues>
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