
With Things you get an excellent to-do manager and (almost) no outliner. With OmniFocus you get an excellent outliner and a not so great to-do manager in one, convenient package. OmniFocus – historically as well as in its current implementation – is an outliner with tacked-on to-do-manager functionality. Things is a to-do manager with focus on every-day usability. īut, since these comparisons are largely based on Things 2, let me add some points: Outliner or to-do manager?
Things 3 vs omnifocus full#
The web is full with comparisons OmniFocus vs Things, it almost reminds me of Vim vs Emacs. No problem, JM, I was already awaiting your comment, and, I was 99% sure that you are an OmniFocus guy Concerning the second to last part of that phrase some folks may say I’m exaggerating a little bit.
Things 3 vs omnifocus download#
I have updated the original download link to the new version.

I know, in real live such a thing would never happen but now the ⌘T-defer consistently works on all ‘today’ items where ⌃] would work too. That is, it also works with to-dos that are camping in your Today box not only since this morning. Now the ⌘T-defer-to-tomorrow will also work if the activation date of the selected to-do is before today. (If you hit ⌘T on an item that is not in the Today list, then the shortcut will behave as usual and set it to ‘today’.)Ĭonditionally Remap Cmd-T (ver 1.1).kmmacros (3.5 KB) So, here a tiny macro that does only one thing: If you hit ⌘ T on an item that is in the Today list it will set the start date to ‘tomorrow’. But, why not use the ⌘ T-shortcut slot to do it? The mnemonics are already perfect… I can do this with the ⌃ ] shortcut, which is equivalent to start date += 1 day. Well, it happens that one of my most frequent actions on ‘today’ items is: setting them to ‘tomorrow’ But the ⌘T shortcut is completely functionless if the to-do is already set to ‘today’. With ⌘ T you can assign the start date ‘today’ to any to-do item.

As you certainly have noticed, after an endless time of waiting Things 3 has been released a couple of weeks ago.Īnd, as a sidenote, Things 3 is probably one of the greatest apps ever written (macOS and iOS), and certainly the best general-purpose task management app.
