It's a command line task manager I wrote in Haskell. I use it every day and it has replaced all other task apps I have tried because it's fast and simple. I also like it because it stores all of my tasks in plain text so I can always edit the file over Dropbox when I'm not at my computer but want to add something to the list.
Thanks! It's perfect for me, but I get the sense that the only good todo app is the one you make yourself. That's why people without the ability to make one spend so much time switching back and forth.
Nice work. Btw, I don't think you need to add node_modules to your repo, at least colors is already on npmjs.org and you can use package.json and NPM to distribute node.js 'env' enabled binaries, it should ease the configuration instructions. Hope this helps :)
Thank you. I have just started with node, so your advice is valuable. Do you know if files with '#!/bin/node' (or was it '#!/bin/env/node') work in windows when published through npm?
I haven't tried in windows, but the recommended way to handle binaries is through the `bin` field in package.json (and this technique doesn't care about the shebang because it doesn't run the script directly using the OS). For example, in the `xlsx` module:
If you specify a js file as an executable file in your package.json, npm wraps it in a .cmd file on Windows just like it wraps it in a shell file on nix.
I made something very similar: https://github.com/hatboysam/shpm
It's a command line task manager I wrote in Haskell. I use it every day and it has replaced all other task apps I have tried because it's fast and simple. I also like it because it stores all of my tasks in plain text so I can always edit the file over Dropbox when I'm not at my computer but want to add something to the list.