Ben Heard | 1 Aug 2006 19:51
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Default reminder file?

remind-fans,

  Just getting in to using remind.  The man page suggests that
~/.reminders is the default reminder file.  That or take reminders
from DOT_REMINDERS variable.  Doesn't seem to work for me.  I'm
running remind 3.00.24 under Cygwin.

% remind
prints out usage

% remind .reminders
seems to work fine

  Any suggestions?

Thanks,
Ben

--

-- 
Ben Heard
e bdheard@...
h (919) 848-2053
m (919) 656-0488

"And if you wanna hear God laugh, tell Him your plans." - Van Zant.
"Help Somebody."

Mark Eli Kalderon | 1 Aug 2006 20:55
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Re: Default reminder file?

rem is the command that runs the default remind file. Check out the  
man page for rem as well as remind. Best, Mark
On 1 Aug 2006, at 18:51, Ben Heard wrote:

> remind-fans,
>
>   Just getting in to using remind.  The man page suggests that
> ~/.reminders is the default reminder file.  That or take reminders
> from DOT_REMINDERS variable.  Doesn't seem to work for me.  I'm
> running remind 3.00.24 under Cygwin.
>
> % remind
> prints out usage
>
> % remind .reminders
> seems to work fine
>
>   Any suggestions?
>
> Thanks,
> Ben
>
> -- 
> Ben Heard
> e bdheard@...
> h (919) 848-2053
> m (919) 656-0488
>
> "And if you wanna hear God laugh, tell Him your plans." - Van Zant.
> "Help Somebody."
(Continue reading)

Lewis Overton | 2 Aug 2006 06:48
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remind+geektool=bash crash

I have GeekTool set to run a shell command "/usr/local/bin/remind ~/.reminders" (no quotes). This does what I expected -- for a while; it puts the reminders on the desktop. Unfortunately, it leaves a process running as verified by 'ps ax' and after adding 15-20 running processes, bash runs out of resources and quits. A restart will bring things back for a while but everything repeats.

This has to be a solved problem. Can someone tell me what to put into GeekTool to avoid the problem. Clearly I didn't do it right.

Lewy

Mac 10.4.7, 1.33 Ghz PowerPc G4, 2.1jaw1 (D8), Remind 03.00.24

Paul Pelzl | 2 Aug 2006 07:14
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Re: remind+geektool=bash crash

On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 08:48:08PM -0800, Lewis Overton wrote:
> I have GeekTool set to run a shell command "/usr/local/bin/remind
> ~/.reminders" (no quotes). This does what I expected -- for a while; it puts
> the reminders on the desktop. Unfortunately, it leaves a process running as
> verified by 'ps ax' and after adding 15-20 running processes, bash runs out
> of resources and quits. A restart will bring things back for a while but
> everything repeats.
> 
> This has to be a solved problem. Can someone tell me what to put into
> GeekTool to avoid the problem. Clearly I didn't do it right.

Use "remind -q ~/.reminders" to prevent Remind from launching the
background process.  (In its default mode, Remind continually scans for
the triggering of timed reminders.)

Paul

Lewis Overton | 2 Aug 2006 07:29
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Re: remind+geektool=bash crash

Thanks for the quick response. That runs remind. From GeekTool, it displays only a red dot (which is usually green). Run from CLI it displays reminders. I'm kinda out of my depth.

On 8/1/06, Paul Pelzl <pelzlpj-nNDzPDmKTdnSiEDVxGk4TQ@public.gmane.org> wrote:
On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 08:48:08PM -0800, Lewis Overton wrote:
> I have GeekTool set to run a shell command "/usr/local/bin/remind
> ~/.reminders" (no quotes). This does what I expected -- for a while; it puts
> the reminders on the desktop. Unfortunately, it leaves a process running as
> verified by 'ps ax' and after adding 15-20 running processes, bash runs out
> of resources and quits. A restart will bring things back for a while but
> everything repeats.
>
> This has to be a solved problem. Can someone tell me what to put into
> GeekTool to avoid the problem. Clearly I didn't do it right.

Use "remind -q ~/.reminders" to prevent Remind from launching the
background process.  (In its default mode, Remind continually scans for
the triggering of timed reminders.)

Paul


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Lewis Overton | 2 Aug 2006 07:55
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Re: remind+geektool=bash crash

So I turned around three times, sprinkled pixie dust on the Mac, and now it all works. Must be about time for bed.

Thanks for the help.

On 8/1/06, Lewis Overton <akakie-Re5JQEeQqe8AvxtiuMwx3w@public.gmane.org> wrote:
Thanks for the quick response. That runs remind. From GeekTool, it displays only a red dot (which is usually green). Run from CLI it displays reminders. I'm kinda out of my depth.


On 8/1/06, Paul Pelzl <pelzlpj-nNDzPDmKTdnSiEDVxGk4TQ@public.gmane.org> wrote:
On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 08:48:08PM -0800, Lewis Overton wrote:
> I have GeekTool set to run a shell command "/usr/local/bin/remind
> ~/.reminders" (no quotes). This does what I expected -- for a while; it puts
> the reminders on the desktop. Unfortunately, it leaves a process running as
> verified by 'ps ax' and after adding 15-20 running processes, bash runs out
> of resources and quits. A restart will bring things back for a while but
> everything repeats.
>
> This has to be a solved problem. Can someone tell me what to put into
> GeekTool to avoid the problem. Clearly I didn't do it right.

Use "remind -q ~/.reminders" to prevent Remind from launching the
background process.  (In its default mode, Remind continually scans for
the triggering of timed reminders.)

Paul


_______________________________________________
Remind-fans mailing list
Remind-fans-uXxz1QwMXInoxfQOdpQF7B2eb7JE58TQ@public.gmane.org
http://lists.whatexit.org/mailman/listinfo/remind-fans


Jon Garvin | 8 Aug 2006 18:18
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basing task recurrance schedule on completed date/time

I've been on the quest for my personal holy grail of task reminder
tools  for quite some time.  I saw a mention of 'Remind' on linux .com
today and spent a while browsing the remind wiki and mailing list
archives sceptically optimistic.  The  fact that  Remind has an actual
scripting language suggests that what I need to do might actually be
possible here, but I don't see a specific mention of it anywhere, so... 
if someone could simply tell me either "No, Outlook is still the only
software that does that well." or "Sure, that's easy, go check out 'this
link'." I'd greatly appreciate it.

What I need is to have a task, let's say "Mow the lawn," that doesn't
necessarily NEED to happen on the day the reminder triggers. Maybe it's
raining, or I've got other plans, or it doesn't really need it yet, or
it's just too damn hot.  So, I put it off for a couple days, or even
until next week.  What I do NOT need to is put it off six days and then
on the 7th get another reminder telling me to do it all over again.
Instead, once I do finally get it done, I want to automatically schedule
a new reminder for, let's say, one week from the time that I completed
it this time.  Outlook does this extremely well, but I have yet to find
anything for linux that does this right. Maybe Remind does, and I've
just been oblivious this whole time? I've got my fingers crossed.

Daniel Martins | 8 Aug 2006 18:29
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Re: basing task recurrance schedule on completed date/time

If I understood what you really want, I think that emacs planner could be an option

I use it integrated with remind and wyrd nicely!

Take a look at

http://www.plannerlove.com/pmwiki/pmwiki.php

Daniel

2006/8/8, Jon Garvin <jgarvin.lists-Re5JQEeQqe8AvxtiuMwx3w@public.gmane.org>:
I've been on the quest for my personal holy grail of task reminder
tools  for quite some time.  I saw a mention of 'Remind' on linux .com
today and spent a while browsing the remind wiki and mailing list
archives sceptically optimistic.  The  fact that  Remind has an actual
scripting language suggests that what I need to do might actually be
possible here, but I don't see a specific mention of it anywhere, so...
if someone could simply tell me either "No, Outlook is still the only
software that does that well." or "Sure, that's easy, go check out 'this
link'." I'd greatly appreciate it.

What I need is to have a task, let's say "Mow the lawn," that doesn't
necessarily NEED to happen on the day the reminder triggers. Maybe it's
raining, or I've got other plans, or it doesn't really need it yet, or
it's just too damn hot.  So, I put it off for a couple days, or even
until next week.  What I do NOT need to is put it off six days and then
on the 7th get another reminder telling me to do it all over again.
Instead, once I do finally get it done, I want to automatically schedule
a new reminder for, let's say, one week from the time that I completed
it this time.  Outlook does this extremely well, but I have yet to find
anything for linux that does this right. Maybe Remind does, and I've
just been oblivious this whole time? I've got my fingers crossed.


_______________________________________________
Remind-fans mailing list
Remind-fans-uXxz1QwMXInoxfQOdpQF7B2eb7JE58TQ@public.gmane.org
http://lists.whatexit.org/mailman/listinfo/remind-fans

Daniel Graham | 8 Aug 2006 18:30
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Re: basing task recurrance schedule on completed date/time

Try putting this in a file that is 'included' in your .reminders.

-Dan

######################
# FLOATING REMINDERS #
######################
#   $Id: FLOAT,v 1.2 2006/05/06 15:59:15 dag Exp dag $
# 
#   To enable floating reminders INCLUDE this file in your reminders
#   file prior to any use of float().
# 
#   Remind usage:
#       REM [float(y, m, d, n)] MSG ... %
#
#   where y/m/d is the target or due date for the reminer with
#       y: integer (4-digit) year
#       m: integer month
#       d: inter date
#   and 
#       n: integer number of days of advance warning.
#
#   Example:
#
#       REM [float(2006,4,15,10)] MSG File tax return%
#
#   will display as follows:
#
#       In calendar modes on 15 Apr 2006 only:
#           File tax return
#
#       Other, non-calendar modes:
#           On any date --- on 15 Apr event list:
#               File tax return (today)
#           On or before 5 Apr --- on 5 Apr event list:
#               File tax return (in 10 days)
#           On 10 Apr --- on 10 Apr event list:
#               File tax return (in 5 days)
#           On 14 Apr --- on 14 Apr event list:
#               File tax return (tomorrow)
#           On 16 Apr --- on 16 Apr event list:
#               File tax return (yesterday)
#           On 18 Apr --- on 18 Apr event list:
#               File tax return (3 days ago)
#
#   Additionally, float() events are automatically assigned priorities so that
#   reminders are ordered by their due dates. These priorities range from 0
#   (1000 days ago) to 2000 with priority 1000 corresponding to today.  Since
#   remind's default priority is 5000, such floating reminders will be listed
#   before any default reminders.
#
IF  ($CalMode || $PSCal )
    # For Cal and PS calendars, only trigger the event on the due date.
    FSET float(y,m,d,n) trigger(date(y,m,d))
ELSE
    # For Simple Calendar (rem -s) and other modes, also set warning trigger,
    # priority and suffixes.
    FSET float(y,m,d,n) iif(date(y,m,d) == today(), trigger(today()) + \
    " PRIORITY 1000", trigger(MAX(realtoday(), date(y,m,d)-n)) + \
    iif(n >= date(y,m,d) - today(), " PRIORITY " + \
    (1000 + (date(y,m,d) - today())),"")))

    FSET msgsuffix(x) iif(0 > x, "", \
    998 >= x, " (" + (1000-x) + " days ago)", \
    999 >= x, " (yesterday)", \
    1000 >= x, " (today)", \
    1001 >= x, " (tomorrow)", \
    2000 >= x, " (in " + (x - 1000) + " days)", "")

    # This calsuffix is used by wxRemind
    FSET calsuffix(x) iif(0 > x, "", \
    998 >= x, " (" + (1000-x) + " days ago)", \
    999 >= x, " (yesterday)", \
    1000 >= x, " (today)", \
    1001 >= x, " (tomorrow)", \
    2000 >= x, " (in " + (x - 1000) + " days)", "")
ENDIF

On 2006-08-08 10:18 -0600, Jon Garvin wrote:
> I've been on the quest for my personal holy grail of task reminder
> tools  for quite some time.  I saw a mention of 'Remind' on linux .com
> today and spent a while browsing the remind wiki and mailing list
> archives sceptically optimistic.  The  fact that  Remind has an actual
> scripting language suggests that what I need to do might actually be
> possible here, but I don't see a specific mention of it anywhere, so... 
> if someone could simply tell me either "No, Outlook is still the only
> software that does that well." or "Sure, that's easy, go check out 'this
> link'." I'd greatly appreciate it.
> 
> What I need is to have a task, let's say "Mow the lawn," that doesn't
> necessarily NEED to happen on the day the reminder triggers. Maybe it's
> raining, or I've got other plans, or it doesn't really need it yet, or
> it's just too damn hot.  So, I put it off for a couple days, or even
> until next week.  What I do NOT need to is put it off six days and then
> on the 7th get another reminder telling me to do it all over again.
> Instead, once I do finally get it done, I want to automatically schedule
> a new reminder for, let's say, one week from the time that I completed
> it this time.  Outlook does this extremely well, but I have yet to find
> anything for linux that does this right. Maybe Remind does, and I've
> just been oblivious this whole time? I've got my fingers crossed.
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Remind-fans mailing list
> Remind-fans@...
> http://lists.whatexit.org/mailman/listinfo/remind-fans
> 

--

-- 
Daniel A Graham
Professor of Economics
Duke University
Durham, NC 27708-0097
919 660-1802

Jon Garvin | 8 Aug 2006 18:39
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Re: basing task recurrance schedule on completed date/time

Thanks. I did see that once, and for some reason wrote it off. I'll take
a closer look.

Daniel Martins wrote:
> If I understood what you really want, I think that emacs planner could
> be an
> option
>
> I use it integrated with remind and wyrd nicely!
>
> Take a look at
>
> http://www.plannerlove.com/pmwiki/pmwiki.php
>
> Daniel
>


Gmane