Hi, Роман.

It’s hard to answer your question because there are so many different ways to 
use tabs and there is no right way, you need to find a setup that matches the 
way you work.

 

Richard raises an important point. A workspace is not a separate profile. If 
you really want to keep your home and work tasks in separate files you can do 
so. And I’m not certain, but there may be a way to keep two instances of MLO on 
screen at once, each showing a separate profile. There are some cases where 
this is necessary, for example where you need access to your work tasks on your 
work computer but company policy prohibits keeping your personal tasks there. 
But I believe that this solution is difficult and that you are much better off 
if you can keep all of your tasks in a single profile.

 

Once you have a single profile with all of your tasks in it, it can be 
challenging to work something through to completion without losing your place. 
This is where tabs help.

 

Some definitions (I am just making these up, anyone else can feel free to 
improve them.

A *view* is a saved set of filters and display options that can be used to look 
at a particular subset of your tasks.

A *workspace* is a look at your profile with a set of views (more about this 
below), a _selection_ (selecting one task as your current task, displayed in 
the right-hand pane) and a _zoom_ (zooming in on a project or folder). A 
workspace only exists when there’s a tab showing it, if the tab is closed the 
workspace is lost. The set of views can be complicated, if this is too much 
information please skip ahead to the definition of tab. When a new tab is 
opened, the set of views is the full set of all saved views in the profile. You 
cannot remove a view from a workspace: when you delete a view it gets deleted 
from all workspaces at once. If you create a new (unsaved) view, or if you make 
changes to an existing view and don’t save them, these changes are made just to 
the views in a workspace and are not available to other workspaces. There are 
changes that change a view in a single workspace that sometimes do not “feel” 
like a change, like if you unhide completed tasks, but this will change the 
view for this one workspace and the view will be different in this workspace 
until you save or revert. You can tell if a view is changed in this workspace 
if there’s an asterisk before the view name. If you revert a view, the changes 
are dropped for this workspace only and you go back to the saved version of the 
view. If you save a view, the changes are applied to this view in all 
workspaces. I hope one of you can write an explanation of this that will be 
understandable by new users . . .

A *tab* is an on-screen space where one of the views in a workspace is 
displayed.

 

You can *sync* any workspace with workspace #1. Sync selection means that when 
you select a task in the synced tab, if that task is visible in the current 
view in tab#1, it will become the selected task in tab#1; when you select a 
task in tab#1 (manually or via sync from some other tab) that task will become 
the current task in all tabs that are synced and that have the task visible. 
Zoom sync means that when you zoom a workspace to a particular folder or 
project, tab#1 (and all other tabs synced with tab#1) will zoom to the same 
project or folder.

 

So, Роман, you want to separate work and home. One way to do that would be to 
set up three folders. Folder 1 should be an outline view (useful for tasks that 
are no in work or home, like “inbox”), and the next two would be called “work” 
and “home”. Organize your outline so that two of your top-level folders are 
“work” and “home” and set up your tasks and projects within these folders. Zoom 
your “work” workspace to the “work” folder and zoom your “home” workspace to 
the “home” folder. MAKE CERTAIN TO TURN OFF ZOOM SYNC for the Work and Home 
folders because you don’t want some other tab changing your focus. If this 
setup were mine, I would add a to-do tab synched with tab one showing the 
highest priority active tasks from all folders, and an Inbox tab. But that may 
not work for you.

 

The reason the to-do view should be synched is so that you can quickly address 
the other items in the outline near the task you are working on. For example, 
in a project with “complete tasks in order” only one task from the project will 
appear in your to-do list. You might want to see what task was finished before 
this, or what task is waiting after it. Just click on the outline tab and it 
will already show your task as the current selection with all of its neighbors 
in the outline displayed near it. Or, I have a daily repeating project of 
things IO should really take care of daily. If I miss a day and then look at my 
to-do, it shows all of yesterday’s uncompleted tasks. I could mark them 
completed one at a time until the project recycles and shows today’s tasks. But 
it’s easier to just click on outline, complete the parent project with a single 
click, and go back to the to-do.

 

A lot of people will have an outline and a to-do in the first couple of tabs, 
followed by tabs for particular projects or areas of interest. If the 
project/area tabs are not synched this provides you with a good way to “keep 
your place” despite interruptions.  

 

There are many other great ways to set up your tabs some of which have been 
documented here. I hope this helps and that it’s not too long.

-Dwight

 

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Richard C
Sent: Wednesday, December 26, 2012 8:43 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [MLO] Re: Manage views in workspace tab in MLO v.4

 

There are two big advantages of tabs over views (for me):

1.      I can create tabs for my current areas that I am currrently focusing on 
(eg I have one at the moment  called 'Xmas' ) and can zoom/make customised 
temporary views (eg select a particular context - my Xmas tab selects all the 
tasks in the All Tasks view which have an @Xmas context) in that tab to show 
the task relevant to that focus area (and without needing to create a new view).
2.      One can work in these 'focus area' tabs (eg add new tasks,  change 
existing tasks, etc) withouth losing ones place in the main ToDo tab (which is 
where I mainly work).

Bear in mind that the models for One Note and MLO are very different (with One 
Note, a piece of information just appears in one tab;  in MLO a piece of 
information can appear in any tab based on the filtering for that tab - so you 
can see the same task in several different contexts).      

 

Richard


On Tuesday, 25 December 2012 19:59:29 UTC, Роман Белодед wrote:

Thank you for the example. But I suppose that you use just one view per tab and 
in such case idea of separate workspaces don`t work. If it true then what does 
tabs for you? For what functionality they are reponsable? Similar behaviour are 
available using list of views on one tab.

I don`t want to critic you or developers design, I just want to understand what 
philosophy developers used for such implementation. And also I`m trying to find 
real use cases for tabs.

On Tuesday, December 25, 2012 8:59:31 PM UTC+4, BOC wrote:

Here is an example of some of the workspace tabs I have setup.

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