A simple command-line todolist manager which can be as powerful as you want it to be.
$ todo add "Fix the stuff"
$ todo
1 | Fix the stuff
$ todo add "Fix the other thing"
$ todo
1 | Fix the stuff
2 | Fix the other thing
$ todo done 1
$ todo
2 | Fix the other thing
pip install todocli
If you wish to install auto-completion for the todo
CLI, you can run:
todo --install-autocompletion
This will add an auto-complete function to your .zshrc or .bashrc file, whichever is found first. You must source
your config file again if you want it to work on your current terminal.
To run the program in development, clone the project (or download its zip) and go to the source
directory. You can run the source by executing:
./todo.py
You can create a directory named .toduh
in the source
directory which will carry development-specific data as long as you run ./todo.py
from the source
directory.
To run the tests, go the source
directory and execute:
./test.py
By default, this only launches the unit tests. There are also functional tests. The fonctional tests uses the files in tests/traces
. These files contain a list of commands (lines introduced by $
), each above the standard output they should produce. The functional tests run each of the commands in a subprocess and compare their output to the expected output. The test is ran on a new datafile each time, which doesn't affect the regular datafile.
To run the functional tests, use the -f
option. The -a
option runs both unit and functional tests. The -v
option, when used with the functional test, prints the commands being executed.
Submit issues for bug reports or enhancement ideas.
MIT. See LICENSE.txt