Forums

Discuss all things Remember The Milk.

menu

Submit multiple tasks at once (bulk adding)

peter.smulders says:
Background info: we use RTM in our business and we often have (large) predictable sets of tasks anchored on specific business processes. For example: hiring and setting up new staff members (all the way through to setting reminders to evaluate their contracts near the end, 7 months into the future), enrolling new customers, product or service changes that have 6 related tasks, etc.

I have clever spreadsheets that can produce these sets of tasks with very rich metadata (such as parameterised URLs that link into our web based systems as near to the task as I can programmatically predict), so that our administrative staff can blast through their tasks in a predefined optimal order (two or three Smart Lists) and with minimal friction, because Shift+U takes them to the task screen and the specific info is already captured in a note field. Note: this is an absolute game changer in team productivity; wel worth years of multiple Pro accounts.

The difficult bit is always finding a way to allow end users (i.e. non-tech wizards) use basic software (i.e. spreadsheets, but not custom code) to 'pump' these task sets into RTM.

I recently found this tool / site: http://files.alnorth.com/rtm/index.html

It is essentially a multi-line version of the Smart Add field in the web app. Although the service works great and it is available for self-hosting, etc, the feature to have the Smart Add field in the web site accept more than one line would be a great addition and open up a slew of additional integration options. (because an external tool would only have to output a set of lines).

I realise that you would have to think about protection against flooding, but the very same problem already exists for the API, so this is really just more of the same.

This could be done without breaking existing UI by just having the existing field in the Web App UI accepting and parsing multiple lines as if they were multiple calls to the single line processing.

I did some research into existing suggestions:

https://www.rememberthemilk.com/forums/ideas/260/ --> it references the e-mail list feature, which is essentially useless for list of tasks that have any sort of metadata, because you hit line length limits in the email world at around 50 chars. Try it -- that is not very much.

It also suggests some sort of wildcard / pattern parsing, so that

buy bread|milk|eggs #groceries ^today

becomes

buy bread #groceries ^today
buy milk #groceries ^today
buy eggs #groceries ^today

I call this "wildcard parsing" and I think it is extremely complicated to correctly implement and only useful to a very small number of people that are comfortable with such syntax. (it is also wildy error prone on both user and programmer side)

https://www.rememberthemilk.com/forums/ideas/9137/ --> this suggests a character to separate multiple tasks, so that more than one task can still go on one line.

This could be a possible implementation, but I have these reservations:
1) if '|' can be used as a separator, why not the newline character? Technically (for the parsing) this is equivalent.
2) manually typing multiple tasks on one line becomes very cluttered in the UI, because the already annoying little bit of sideways scrolling becomes a LOT of sideways scrolling.

NB: that post title suggests a task delimiter as I described but the explanation is actually more like wildcard parsing.

UI suggestions:
* until a newline character is input, retain behaviour as is. This will not disturb the many users that will not need nor use this feature. Only when a newline is noticed, swap the (visible) single line element for a multiline text field and grab the existing content of the single line field (i.e. the first task that was entered).
* The current Smart Add field turns ^ # * etc into coloured blobs for parsed data. As a tech-savvy pro user, I would be fine with a UI 'downgrade' at the switch point from single to multiple lines: single line gets coloured blobs and suggestions in a dropdown, etc and multiline just becomes a multiline text element (you could make it bigger at that point) but without adaptive assistance.

Note to fellow users interested in this: please indicate which details of this suggestion you like and agree or not; there are several ways this could be implemented and some may be more useful to people than others.
Posted at 8:51am on April 8, 2021
peter.smulders says:
I forgot to mention this idea: https://www.rememberthemilk.com/forums/ideas/22555/

It suggests default parsing into subtasks. I do not support that, because subtasks have a wholly different dynamic than 'sets of tasks'.

If multiline parsing does get implemented, it could be extended to include subtasks by adding an indentation or prefix per subtask line:

Do the main thing #myproject ^this week
-- Subtask one #myproject ^now
-- Subtask two #hr-services #myproject #other_project ^tomorrow
Another task #other_project
Unrelated task @downtown_office


You can see how this would fit many different use cases for (smart) lists, subtasks clustering, etc.
Posted 3 years ago
(closed account) says:
I support this idea. I'm sure the developers could come up with an implementation that would work well for aesthetics, space, functionality, etc.
Good work in the explanation, peter.smulders.
Posted 3 years ago
dbsk says:
In the desktop app and web app, I suggest adding a button to the toolbar that has buttons for "Add a due date", "Give to", and "Add task". This button would simple change the one-line input box into a five-line scrollable multiline input box, where tasks are line-separated.
Posted 3 years ago
peter.smulders says:
The switch to a multiline field can be done without a button, simply by detecting a newline character. This can be input with Shift+Enter, thus avoiding any need for extra UI.

A Multiline field could be five lines, but just as easily fifteen or two. Maybe the maximum available space in the viewport; this is trivial CSS/JS.

It could also grow an extra line with every next newline character.
Posted 1 year ago
Log in to post a reply.