On Aug 1, 2007, at 18:52, Bastien wrote:
"Piotr Zielinski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
The reason why I decided to use priorities was because it was easier
to make them work with org-agenda. In particular, I don't know how to
make the agenda display, for example, "all headlines without
the :t
On 8/1/07, Renzo Been <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> But what is actually the difference between using:
> *priorities
>
> and:
> *Using tags
>
> You could make tags like this:
> Urgent
> Tomorow
> Low
Generally speaking, the priorities are a sorting tool. Tags may be
used for that goal, too, and by
"Piotr Zielinski" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The reason why I decided to use priorities was because it was easier
> to make them work with org-agenda. In particular, I don't know how to
> make the agenda display, for example, "all headlines without
> the :today: tag in the order of increasing d
On 01/08/07, Renzo Been <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> But what is actually the difference between using:
> *priorities
>
> and:
> *Using tags
That's a very good point. The reason why I decided to use priorities
was because it was easier to make them work with org-agenda. In
particular, I don't kn
Hi,
Maybe I'm not that smart here...
But what is actually the difference between using:
*priorities
and:
*Using tags
You could make tags like this:
Urgent
Tomorow
Low
etc...
Ciao,
Renzo
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Hello,
I think there are two possible interpretations of 'priority', /importance/ and
/urgency/.
It is up to the user which is preferred. You propose the interpretation as
urgency: "I have to do that thing today/this week/sometime". Importance may
come into play with your daily decision, w