"Piotr Zielinski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I'd like to find out how different people use priorities (#A, #B, ...) > in org-mode. I've always assumed the standard interpretation (#A = > high priority, #B = medium, #C = low). However, the problem with this > approach is that what "high priority" means is not well defined, and > if you are not careful, then all your items will quickly become high > priority, which defeats the whole point.
I don't really use priorities at all, since I'm using org-mode to do GTD. If something has to be done today, then that's a deadline, not a priority. If I don't need or want to get something done /in the next week/, it probably shouldn't be crowding up my todo-lists at all, and making it harder for me to find things I should be doing; it should be on my someday/maybe list. -- +-----------------------------------------------------------+ | Jason F. McBrayer [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | If someone conquers a thousand times a thousand others in | | battle, and someone else conquers himself, the latter one | | is the greatest of all conquerors. --- The Dhammapada | _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode