It's a great question and I will try to restrain my answer from getting terribly long. Five topics: Managing tasks versus managing task managers, computed score, importance versus urgency, manual sorting, close enough versus perfection

Managing tasks versus managing the task manager
My prime objective for my time with task managers is to spend less time managing tasks and more time getting the tasks done. Time spent managing the task manager comes on the wrong side of this equation, so I fight against the temptation to spent long hours endlessly tweaking my to-do's. I find it important to keep that in mind in this discussions because this is one of those areas that always falls short of perfect and you can drown yourself trying to get a little closer to perfection.

Computed score
The thing that you are fighting with is called Computed Score. This is a wonderful thing which rolls up dates, priorities and maybe some other stuff and rolls it all together into a single number per task that can be used to order your to-do lists. It's the only way (in MLO) to get a task that starts out low in the to-do list but moves towards the top as the due date approaches. Most (or at least much) of the time it works pretty well, and there are some settings that can be used to tweak it. There are some areas where it is hard to handle. One involves tasks with no due date, which never seem to be in the right place when compares to tasks that have a due date. Another involves importance versus urgency which is discussed below. I don't use computed score, because it violates my prime objective - there is always some task in the wrong place and when I tweak stuff to make it come out better something else gets worse and it never ends. However a lot of people use computed score and some people think it's the best feature of MLO. If you want to use it, you might want to start by understanding it. There are a few pages in the MLO Users Guide about computed score, with formulas and examples. If you want to really understand it, follow along and actually do the math yourself.

Importance versus urgency
I think that I understand the difference between importance and urgency and I think I understand what a person needs to do about them when managing tasks (urgent matters always come before important ones within limits but if important matters are aging without getting any attention because your time is entirely consumed by urgent matters then you need to block some time for important matters only) but I don't believe that there is any task manager that actually supports this. Creating a weighted mean of the two scores (as computed-score does) strikes me as meaningless and misleading. What I do is just to assign a single number representing priority, which is my mental pick for whatever composite of importance and urgency is needed. I assign this to Importance and I ignore the urgency field. I use importance numbers between 170 and 199 for sequencing tasks as needed: click on the importance slider and hit the right or left arrow and watch the task jump up or down in the to-do list.

Manual sorting
When you define a view as manually sorted, then MLO remembers, for that view, the order for all of the tasks. This gives you total control over the order. It also means that every time the order has to change (for example because a due date is approaching) you have to go in and make the manual adjustment. Also, every time you create a new task it will not know where it belongs in the manual view until you go in and move it. This can all add up to a lot of manage-the-task-manager time if you are not careful. Also, with one exception (I forget which one it is) when you synch a view to another device it does not bring its task order across with it. If these drawbacks don't bother you too much then manual ordering might be right for you

Close enough versus perfection
When I was starting out with task managers I used to try to make it so that the next thing I should do would be at the top of the list. It turns out that this is insanely timeconsuming and not really that rewarding. Instead of thinking of the task manager as something that will tell you what to do next, think of it as something that will remember but hide all the stuff that you couldn't or shouldn't try to do right now, leaving you with a short list of tasks to consider when picking your next task. I am happy when the task I chose came from the top five tasks on my list.

Conclusion
Most of my lists are sorted by importance. Some are by modification date (the last thing I touched is at the top) and some by due date. The most important thing for me in any view is making sure that every task that doen't belong in that view gets dropped off. Order is less important.

Hope this helps,

-Dwight

On 12/7/2016 12:52 AM, c.k. lester wrote:
How do you guys make sure your task list is proper. IOW, I have a lot of tasks, 
and they're not displaying in the order I want them to on my active actions 
list. This is no doubt because I haven't added enough information, but what is 
the best way to order the tasks?

I had a bizarre occurrence when exploring my options. I took a task that was 
close to the top of the active actions list (it's to watch a series of 
educational videos) and added a start date of today and a goal date of 
Thursday. It moved the task to the bottom of the active actions list!! It 
should have remained somewhere near the top at least.

So, then I set its urgency a little higher, and then it got popped to the top.

I think I'd rather just sort everything myself, manually. If I do that in some 
view, how will that affect the task information? What variable does it use to 
maintain a manually sorted list?

So, basically, what's the best way to keep a task list sorted?

Thank you!


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