


What I didn’t know at the time, is that Todoist was working on a boards feature, which I first used in a beta version, and which has now been released! Here I described a physical Kanban board as well as “Kanban-like” workflows in various apps.

If today was March 23 and Friday was March 25, you would type in “every day ending March 25”.I only wrote about how I use Kanban for managing research projects quite recently.

(You can find out more about integrating IFTTT and Todoist to automate some really handy processes here: IFTTT & Todoist Gmail Automation Article)Īnother area where date formatting for recurring tasks can come in handy is setting start and end dates.Īs an example, let’s say you had a project with a new task that came up, but you only need reminders through the end of the week. This is also important to know about if you are using IFTTT and Todoist – you’ll need to make sure you have your date formatting correct or you may run into some real issues. There’s lots of date formatting options that gives repeating tasks a lot of flexibility – you can find more of them here on the Todoist date formatting guide. If you only want weekdays you would type in “every weekday”. When setting up a task in Todoist, to make it recurring you fill out the task information as you normally would, but when it comes to the time / date field you make some small changes.įor example, if you want a daily reminder you would type in “every day” in the date field and it would become recurring every day (remember – every day is ever day, including weekends!). Using recurring and repeating tasks in Todoist is a great way to save a lot of time and to stay on top of all of your tasks that occur regularly, or at least more than once.
