Bear’s system is totally tag focused. There is no other way to organize.
We organize around projects. Tags are there at this point for labeling things, and for search. We have future plans to add better tag management and organization, so they will get more powerful over time.
Apologies if this was a slightly misleading example, we don’t support yet custom colours for tags, we might in the future. What the example tried to convey is that you can assign values to your tags, like this #priority(high), #priority(low), allowing you to find both all notes that a #priority tag but also specifically all notes with a #priority(high) tag.
Thanks. Colours are useful for visual scanning once you get lots of text.
I’ve used Things, Trello etc. but the concept behind Agenda is great, especially the date link and calendar.
Do you have a place I could request featrues for your roadmap?
Thanks
Andrew
Is there any way to “invite” a person to your note or share your project with others?
I have weekly meeting project section in Agenda that I would like to invite people to, so they can see what is on the agenda for the week and what tasks have been assigned to who. Is this an option? How can those notes be shared with others? I realize the person tag is only a tag and does not invite the person to that particular note(s).
What other reserved symbolic tags exist?
I find the star very useful and would like to the others that exist for use in “bullet journal” within Agenda
(#eye#bang <❗️> etc would be very helpful)
I think it would be tricky, because that part of the note uses a completely different text presentation technology. We will think about it. Thanks for the feedback!
What should I do if I need to include a literal “@” in the text of a note. For instance, I’m attempting to record a command line that I use to perform a specific task at work, and the command includes an actual “@” as part of the command. Currently, it’s trying to turn the rest of the command up to the next space into a person, which of course isn’t my intention. Also, how would we use literal hash symbols (#) as well?