Hi, Mackenal. I've never heard of anyone doing anything like that. Maybe it 
would help if you could give an example of a real-life situation where this 
would be usedful, and how it would work. When I try to think this through I 
get confused with questions like, if one recurring task overrides and 
cancels another, what happens to the one that got overridden? Does the 
overridden task linger on in some kind of suspended state waiting to be 
reactivated, maybe tomorrow? Does it totally go away and stop recurring? Is 
it a "skip" function where the task gets skipped this time but comes back 
next time? If it's a skip and if the skipped task and the other task that 
overrode it are both on the same schedule (for example, weekly on Saturday) 
then the overridden task is going to get overridden every week forever, 
right? Would that be a problem?

On Friday, May 13, 2016 at 5:21:50 AM UTC-4, [email protected] wrote:
>
> When two or more reoccurring tasks fall on the same day can you designate 
> one to override and cancel the others?
>

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