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Use `doing help` to find commands like `doing undo.`
…On 13 Nov 2023, at 2:14, Younes wrote:
As a new user, I find it very hard to find what I need to do, which is
simply just deleting a task I added by mistake.
The wiki does not seem to be easy to go through, compared to what I'm
used to in other CLIs.
For example, why is it so hard (impossible) to find how to delete a
task I added by mistake ? (oh, and I don't want to archive the task or
edit some file or whatever, I just want to type a simple doing command
and get the task removed!
I even cloned the wiki and created a custom GPT, and it didn't find a
way.. it suggested archiving and editing a task...
Anyway, as a new user, the wiki doesn't seem to be intuitive at all..
and it's a bit disappointing because _doing_ is really a great tool!
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To be fair, doing has so many subcommands that a typical CLI-style
documentation would be even less readable than the wiki. That's why the
wiki exists. I'm not sure how you're searching, but 'undo last command'
should have given you the results you needed.
…On 13 Nov 2023, at 2:14, Younes wrote:
As a new user, I find it very hard to find what I need to do, which is
simply just deleting a task I added by mistake.
The wiki does not seem to be easy to go through, compared to what I'm
used to in other CLIs.
For example, why is it so hard (impossible) to find how to delete a
task I added by mistake ? (oh, and I don't want to archive the task or
edit some file or whatever, I just want to type a simple doing command
and get the task removed!
I even cloned the wiki and created a custom GPT, and it didn't find a
way.. it suggested archiving and editing a task...
Anyway, as a new user, the wiki doesn't seem to be intuitive at all..
and it's a bit disappointing because _doing_ is really a great tool!
--
Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub:
#164
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thank you, @ttscoff EDIT: btw, is there a cheat sheet for doing commands ? (I know doing help exists.. but a cheat sheet could be easier to grasp) |
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Try `doing select`, locate the entry you want to remove, then select
`remove`.
…-Brett
On 13 Nov 2023, at 8:53, Younes wrote:
thank you, @ttscoff
I don't mind wiki or docs, as long as it's intuitive / easy to adapt
with.. (maybe it's too subjective).. but for example, in my use case,
"undo" doesn't work.. because I don't want to "Ctrl + Z" my last
actions.. because my last actions do not represent the tasks I added
by mistake.. that's why I'm looking for a "delete" or a "remove"
subcommand...
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As a new user, I find it very hard to find what I need to do, which is simply just deleting a task I added by mistake.
The wiki does not seem to be easy to go through, compared to what I'm used to in other CLIs.
For example, why is it so hard (impossible) to find how to delete a task I added by mistake ? (oh, and I don't want to archive the task or edit some file or whatever, I just want to type a simple doing command and get the task removed!
I even cloned the wiki and created a custom GPT, and it didn't find a way.. it suggested archiving and editing a task...
Anyway, as a new user, the wiki doesn't seem to be intuitive at all.. and it's a bit disappointing because doing is really a great tool!
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