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A non-AI automatic scheduler for taskwarrior (i.e. alternative to skedpal/timehero/flowsavvy/reclaim/trevor/motion)

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A non-AI automatic scheduler for taskwarrior (i.e. alternative to skedpal/timehero/flowsavvy/reclaim/trevor/motion)

This is a taskwarrior extension checks if tasks can be completed on time, considering estimated time and working hours.

Features

  • Use arbitrarily complex time maps
  • Use ical to block time from scheduling (e.g. for meetings, vacations, etc.)
  • Implement scheduling algorithm for parallely working on multiple tasks
  • Use Google API to access calendars
  • Export tasks to iCal calendar and API calendars

Install

  1. pipx install taskcheck
  2. taskcheck --install

How does it work

This extension parses your pending and waiting tasks sorted decreasingly by urgency and tries to schedule them in the future. It considers their estimated time to schedule all tasks starting from the most urgent one.

UDAs

Taskcheck leverages two UDAs, estimated and time_map. The estimated attribute is the expected time to complete the task in hours. The time_map is a comma-separated list of strings that indicates the hours per day in which you will work on a task (e.g. work, weekend, etc.). The exact correspondence between the time_map and the hours of the day is defined in the configuration file of taskcheck. For instance:

[time_maps]
# get an error)
[time_maps.work]
monday = [[9, 12.30], [14, 17]]
tuesday = [[9, 12.30], [14, 17]]
# ...

They say it's an "AI"

Taskcheck will also parse online iCal calendars (Google, Apple, etc.) and will match them with your time maps. It will then modify the Taskwarrior tasks by adding the completion_date attribute with the expected date of completion and the scheduled attribute with the date in which the task is expected to start.

It will also print a red line for every task whose completion_date is after its due_date.

In general, it is recommended to run taskcheck rather frequently and at least once at the beginning of your working day.

Reports

You can also print simple reports that exploit the scheduling UDA filled by Taskcheck to grasp how much time you have to work on which task in which day. For instance:

  • taskcheck -r today will show the tasks planned for today
  • taskcheck -r 1w will show the tasks planned for the next week

Configuration

taskcheck --install allows you to create required and recommended configurations for taskwarrior. It will also generate a default configuration file for taskcheck.

Below is an example of taskcheck configuration file:

[time_maps]
# in which hours you will work in each day (in 24h format, if you use e.g. 25.67 you will likely 
# get an error)
[time_maps.work]
monday = [[9, 12.30], [14, 17]]
tuesday = [[9, 12.30], [14, 17]]
wednesday = [[9, 12.30], [14, 17]]
thursday = [[9, 12.30], [14, 17]]
friday = [[9, 12.30], [14, 17]]

[time_maps.weekend]
saturday = [[9, 12.30], ]
sunday = [[9, 12.30], ]

[scheduler]
days_ahead = 1000 # how far go with the schedule (lower values make the computation faster)

[calendars]
# ical calendars can be used to block your time and make the scheduling more precise
[calendars.1]
url = "https://your/url/to/calendar.ics"
expiration = 0.08 # in hours (0.08 hours =~ 5 minutes)
timezone = "Europe/Rome" # if set, force timezone for this calendar; timezone values are TZ identifiers (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones)

[calendars.holidays]
url = "https://www.officeholidays.com/ics-clean/italy/milan"
event_all_day_is_blocking = true
expiration = 720 # in hours (720 hours = 30 days)

[report]
additional_attributes = ["estimated", "due", "urgency"] # additional attributes to show in the report
# when these words are matched in the task description, the corresponding emoji is used
emoji_keywords = {"meet"=":busts_in_silhouette:", "review"=":mag_right:"}
include_unplanned = true # include unplanned tasks in the report in an ad-hoc section
additional_attributes_unplanned = ["due", "urgency"] # additional attributes to show in the report for unplanned tasks

Algorithm

The algorithm simulates what happens if you work on a task for a certain time on a given day.

For each day X starting from today, it sorts the tasks by decreasing urgency. It start from the most urgent tasks that can be allocated on day X depending on the task's time_map and on your calendars. It allocates a few number of hours to the task, then recomputes the urgencies exactly as Taskwarrior would do if it was running on day X. Having recomputed the urgencies, it restarts.

If after 2 hours a long task has decreased its urgency, it will be noticed and the newer most urgent task will get scheduled in its place.

For today, taskcheck will skip the hours in the past -- i.e. if you're running at 12 pm, it will skip all the available slots until 12 pm.

The maximum time that is allocated at each attempt is by default 2 hours (or less if the task is shorter), but you can change it by tuning the Taskwarrior UDA min_block.

Tips and Tricks

  • You can exclude a task from being scheduled by removing the time_map or estimated attributes.
  • You can see tasks that you can execute now with the task ready report.

CLI Options

-v, --verbose: increase output verbosity
-i, --install: install taskcheck configuration
-r, --report: show tasks planned until a certain time

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A non-AI automatic scheduler for taskwarrior (i.e. alternative to skedpal/timehero/flowsavvy/reclaim/trevor/motion)

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