Carsten Dominik <carsten.domi...@gmail.com> writes: [...] >>> >>> This ist just to explain what "near" means in the sentence before. >>> I have improved the docstring, thanks. >> >> And I've made it work with 'near and 'far symbols. >> >> Now org-agenda-todo-ignore-with-date can be set to: >> >> nil - to show (not ignore) notes with deadline timestamps >> 'far - to ignore notes which are further than the warning period >> 'near - to hide deadlines that are really close, good for an >> ostrich ;-) >> non-nil - do not show *any* notes with deadline timestamps on a todo > > I am wondering: What would be a good use case for the `far' setting?
As I've described it somewhere before I use it (and SCHEDULED) for sending messages to myself in the future. The DEADLINE means to me: You've got to finish this job before certain time. But don't worry about it if it is not org-deadline-close *now*, you won't find it on your todo list too. SCHEDULED means more or less the same except that there is no date I should complete the job before and I put -SCHEDULED>="<now>" in all my filters. For example I've sent send the announcement yesterday, changed the the keyword to WAITING and put "SCHEDULED: <2010-02-13 sob>". Then if I wouldn't have found your reply in my inbox by Saturday I would see the WAITING item on my todo list. This is kind of artificial limb util someone writes org-reality-depend.el. I haven't decided yet how to cope with all this conditions on a timed agenda view. -- Miłego dnia, Łukasz Stelmach _______________________________________________ Emacs-orgmode mailing list Please use `Reply All' to send replies to the list. Emacs-orgmode@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/emacs-orgmode