Frequently Asked Questions
(Actually, that's a misnomer. These are really Repeatedly Asked Questions.)
Q: When I redirect the output of task to a file, I lose all
the colors. How do I fix this?
A: Task knows (or thinks it knows) when the output is not going
directly to a terminal, and strips out all the color control
characters. Prevent this with the following entry in your
.taskrc file:
_forcecolor=on
Q: How do I backup my task data files? Where are they?
A: Task writes all pending tasks to the file ~/.task/pending.data
and all completed and deleted tasks to ~/.task/completed.data.
They are text files, so they can just be copied to another
location for safekeeping. Don't forget there is also the
~/.taskrc file that contains your task configuration data.
Q: How can I separate my work tasks from my home tasks?
Specifically, can I keep them completely separate?
A: You can do this by creating an alternate .taskrc file,
then using shell aliases. Here is are example Bash
commands to achieve this:
% cp ~/.taskrc ~/.taskrc_home
% (now edit .taskrc_home to change the value of data.location)
% alias wtask="task"
% alias htask="task rc:~/.taskrc_home"
This gives you two commands, 'wtask' and 'htask' that
operate using two different sets of task data files.
Q: Can I revert to a previous version of task? How?
A: Yes, you can revert to a previous version of task,
simply by downloading an
older version and
installing it. If you find a bug in task, then this
may be the only way to work around the bug, until a
new release is made.
Note that it is possible that the task file format will change. For example, the format changed between versions 1.5.0 and 1.6.0. Task will automatically upgrade the file but if you need to revert to a previous version of task, there is the file format to consider. This is yet another good reason to back up your task data files!
Copyright 2006-2009, P. Beckingham. All rights reserved.