taskrc(5) User Manuals taskrc(5)NAMEtaskrc - Configuration file for the task(1) command
SYNOPSIS
$HOME/.taskrc
task rc:<directory-path>/.taskrc ...
TASKRC=<directory-path>/.taskrc task ...
DESCRIPTION
taskwarrior obtains its configuration data from a file called .taskrc .
This file is normally located in the user's home directory:
$HOME/.taskrc
The default location can be overridden using the rc: attribute when
running task:
$ task rc:<directory-path>/.taskrc ...
or using the TASKRC environment variable:
$ TASKRC=/tmp/.taskrc task ...
Individual options can be overridden by using the rc.<name>: attribute
when running task:
$ task rc.<name>:<value> ...
or
$ task rc.<name>=<value> ...
If taskwarrior is run without an existing configuration file it will
ask if it should create a default, sample .taskrc file in the user's
home directory.
The taskwarrior configuration file consists of a series of assignments
in each line. The assignments have the syntax:
<name-of-configuration-variable>=<value-to-be-set>
where:
<name-of-configuration-variable>
is one of the variables described below
<value-to-be-set>
is the value the variable is to be set to.
and set a configuration variable to a certain value. The equal sign
("=") is used to separate the variable name from the value to be set.
The hash mark, or pound sign ("#") is used as a comment character. It
can be used to annotate the configuration file. All text after the
character to the end of the line is ignored.
Note that taskwarrior is flexible about the values used to represent
Boolean items. You can use "on", "yes", "y", "1" and "true". Anything
else means "off".
EDITING
You can edit your .taskrc file by hand if you wish, or you can use the
'config' command. To permanently set a value in your .taskrc file, use
this command:
$ task config nag "You have higher priority tasks!"
To delete an entry, use this command:
$ task config nag
Taskwarrior will then use the default value. To explicitly set a value
to blank, and therefore avoid using the default value, use this com‐
mand:
$ task config nag ""
Taskwarrior will also display all your settings with this command:
$ task show
and in addition, will also perform a check of all the values in the
file, warning you of anything it finds amiss.
NESTING CONFIGURATION FILES
The .taskrc can include other files containing configuration settings
by using the include statement:
include <path/to/the/configuration/file/to/be/included>
By using include files you can divide your main configuration file into
several ones containing just the relevant configuration data like col‐
ors, etc.
There are two excellent uses of includes in your .taskrc, shown here:
include /usr/local/share/doc/task/rc/holidays.en-US.rc
include /usr/local/share/doc/task/rc/dark-16.theme
This includes two standard files that are distributed with taskwarrior,
which define a set of US holidays, and set up a 16-color theme to use,
to color the reports and calendar.
ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
These environmant variables override defaults and command line argu‐
ments.
TASKDATA=~/.task
This overrides the default path for the taskwarrior data files.
TASKRC=~/.taskrc
This overrides the default RC file.
CONFIGURATION VARIABLES
Valid variable names and their default values are:
FILES
data.location=$HOME/.task
This is a path to the directory containing all the taskwarrior
files. By default, it is set up to be ~/.task, for example:
/home/paul/.task
Note that you can use the ~ shell meta character, which will be
properly expanded.
Note that the TASKDATA environment variable overrides this set‐
ting.
locking=on
Determines whether to use file locking when accessing the pend‐
ing.data and completed.data files. Defaults to "on". Solaris
users who store the data files on an NFS mount may need to set
locking to "off". Note that there is danger in setting this
value to "off" - another program (or another instance of task)
may write to the task.pending file at the same time.
gc=on Can be used to temporarily suspend garbage collection (gc), so
that task IDs don't change. Note that this should be used in
the form of a command line override (task rc.gc=off ...), and
not permanently used in the .taskrc file, as this significantly
affects performance in the long term.
exit.on.missing.db=no
When set to 'yes' causes the program to exit if the database
(~/.task or rc.data.location or TASKDATA override) is missing.
Default value is 'no'.
TERMINAL
detection=on
Determines whether to use ioctl to establish the size of the
window you are using, for text wrapping.
defaultwidth=80
The width of output used when auto-detection support is not
available. Defaults to 80. If set to 0, it is interpreted as
infinite width, therefore with no word-wrapping; this is useful
when redirecting report output to a file for subsequent han‐
dling.
defaultheight=24
The height of output used when auto-detection support is not
available. Defaults to 24. If set to 0, it is interpreted as
infinite height. This is useful when redirecting charts to a
file for subsequent handling.
avoidlastcolumn=no
Causes the width of the terminal minus one to be used as the
full width. This avoids placing color codes in the last column
which can cause problems for Cygwin users. Default value is
'no'.
hyphenate=on
Hyphenates lines when wrapping breaks occur mid-word. Default
value is 'on'.
editor=vi
Specifies which text editor you wish to use for when the task
edit <ID> command is used. Taskwarrior will first look for this
configuration variable. If found, it is used. Otherwise it will
look for the $VISUAL or $EDITOR environment variables, before it
defaults to using "vi".
edit.verbose=on
When set to on (the default), helpful explanatory comments are
added to the edited file when using the "task edit ..." command.
Setting this to off means that you would see a smaller, more
compact representation of the task, with no help text. Depre‐
cated - use verbosity token 'edit'.
locale=en-US.UTF8
Locale to be used by Taskwarrior for synchronization with the
task server. The default value is currently blank.
MISCELLANEOUS
verbose=on|off|nothing|list...
When set to "on" (the default), helpful explanatory comments are
added to all output from Taskwarrior. Setting this to "off"
means that you would see regular output.
The special value "nothing" can be used to eliminate all
optional output, which results in only the formatted data being
shown, with nothing else. This output is most readily parsed
and used by shell scripts.
Alternatively, you can specify a comma-separated list of ver‐
bosity tokens that control specific occasions when output is
generated. This list may contain:
blank Inserts extra blank lines in output, for clarity
header Messages that appear before report output
footnote Messages that appear after report output
label Column labels on tabular reports
new-id Provides feedback of any new task IDs
affected Reports 'N tasks affected' and similar
edit Used the verbose template for the 'edit' command
special Feedback when applying special tags
project Feedback about project status changes
Note that the "on" setting is equivalent to all the tokens being
specified, and the "nothing" setting is equivalent to none of
the tokens being specified.
Here are the shortcut equivalents:
verbose=on
verbose=blank,header,footnote,label,new-
id,affected,edit,special,project
verbose=off
verbose=blank,label,new-id,edit
verbose=nothing
verbose=
Those additional comments are sent to the standard error for
header, footnote and project. The others are sent to standard
output.
confirmation=yes
May be "yes" or "no", and determines whether taskwarrior will
ask for confirmation before deleting a task, performing bulk
changes, or the undo command. The default value is "yes". Con‐
sider leaving this setting as "yes", for safety.
echo.command=yes
May be "yes" or "no", and causes the display of the ID and
description of any task when you run the start, stop, do, undo
or delete commands. The default value is "yes". Deprecated -
use verbosity tokens 'header' and 'affected'.
indent.annotation=2
Controls the number of spaces to indent annotations when shown
beneath the description field. The default value is "2".
indent.report=0
Controls the indentation of the entire report output. Default
is "0".
row.padding=0
Controls left and right padding around each row of the report
output. Default is "0".
column.padding=0
Controls padding between columns of the report output. Default
is "1".
bulk=3 Is a number, defaulting to 3. When this number or greater of
tasks are modified in a single command, confirmation will be
required, unless the confirmation variable is "no".
This is useful for preventing large-scale unintended changes.
nag=You have higher priority tasks.
This may be a string of text, or blank. It is used as a prompt
when a task is started or completed that is not considered high
priority. Default value is: You have higher priority tasks. It
is a gentle reminder that you are contradicting your own prior‐
ity settings.
complete.all.projects=yes
May be yes or no, and determines whether the tab completion
scripts consider all the project names you have used, or just
the ones used in active tasks. The default value is "no".
list.all.projects=yes
May be yes or no, and determines whether the 'projects' command
lists all the project names you have used, or just the ones used
in active tasks. The default value is "no".
complete.all.tags=yes
May be yes or no, and determines whether the tab completion
scripts consider all the tag names you have used, or just the
ones used in active tasks. The default value is "no".
list.all.tags=yes
May be yes or no, and determines whether the 'tags' command
lists all the tag names you have used, or just the ones used in
active tasks. The default value is "no".
print.empty.columns=no
May be yes or no, and determines whether columns with no data
for any task are printed. Defaults to no.
search.case.sensitive=yes
May be yes or no, and determines whether keyword lookup and sub‐
stitutions on the description and annotations are done in a case
sensitive way. Defaults to yes.
regex=off
Controls whether regular expression support is enabled. The
default value is off, because this advanced feature could cause
confusion among users that are not comfortable with regular
expressions.
xterm.title=no
Sets the xterm window title when reports are run. Defaults to
off.
patterns=on
Enables or disables pattern support on the command line, such as
/foo/. Defaults to on.
expressions=on
Enables or disables algebraic expression support on the command
line, such as "due<eom and (pri=H or pri=M)". Defaults to on.
dom=on Enables or disables access to taskwarrior internals and task
metadata on the command line. Defaults to on.
json.array=off
Determines whether the query command encloses the JSON output in
'[...]' to create a properly-formed JSON array. Defaults to
off.
_forcecolor=no
Taskwarrior shuts off color automatically when the output is not
sent directly to a TTY. For example, this command:
$ task list > file
will not use any color. To override this, use:
$ task rc._forcecolor=yes list > file
shell.prompt=task>
The task shell command uses this value as a prompt. You can
change it to any string you like.
active.indicator=*
The character or string to show in the start.active column.
Defaults to *.
tag.indicator=+
The character or string to show in the tag.indicator column.
Defaults to +.
dependency.indicator=D
The character or string to show in the depends.indicator column.
Defaults to +.
recurrence.indicator=R
The character or string to show in the recurrence_indicator col‐
umn. Defaults to R.
recurrence.limit=1
The number of future recurring tasks to show. Defaults to 1.
For example, if a weekly recurring task is added with a due date
of tomorrow, and recurrence.limit is set to 2, then a report
will list 2 pending recurring tasks, one for tomorrow, and one
for a week from tomorrow.
undo.style=side
When the 'undo' command is run, taskwarrior presents a before
and after comparison of the data. This can be in either the
'side' style, which compares values side-by-side in a table, or
'diff' style, which uses a format similar to the 'diff' command.
burndown.bias=0.666
The burndown bias is a number that lies within the range 0 <=
bias <= 1. The bias is the fraction of the find/fix rates
derived from the short-term data (last 25% of the report) versus
the longer term data (last 50% of the report). A value of 0.666
(the default) means that the short-term rate has twice the
weight of the longer-term rate. The calculation is as follows:
rate = (long-term-rate * (1 - bias)) + (short-term-rate *
bias)
abbreviation.minimum=2
Minimum length of any abbreviated command/value. This means
that "ve", "ver", "vers", "versi", "versio" will all equate to
"version", but "v" will not. Default is 2.
debug=off
Taskwarrior has a debug mode that causes diagnostic output to be
displayed. Typically this is not something anyone would want,
but when reporting a bug, debug output can be useful. It can
also help explain how the command line is being parsed, but the
information is displayed in a developer-friendly, not a user-
friendly way.
alias.rm=delete
Taskwarrior supports command aliases. This alias provides an
alternate name (rm) for the delete command. You can use aliases
to provide alternate names for any of the commands. Several
commands you may use are actually aliases - the 'history'
report, for example, or 'export'.
EXTENSIONS
extensions=on
Enables the extension system. Defaults to on.
DATES
dateformat=m/d/Y
dateformat.report=m/d/Y
dateformat.holiday=YMD
dateformat.edit=m/d/Y H:N:S
dateformat.info=m/d/Y H:N:S
dateformat.annotation=m/d/Y
report.X.dateformat=m/d/Y
This is a string of characters that defines how taskwarrior for‐
mats date values. The precedence order for the configuration
variable is report.X.dateformat then dateformat.report then
dateformat for formating the due dates in reports. If both
report.X.dateformat and dateformat.report are not set then date‐
format will be applied to the date. Entered dates as well as
all other displayed dates in reports are formatted according to
dateformat.
The default value is: m/d/Y. The string can contain the charac‐
ters:
m minimal-digit month, for example 1 or 12
d minimal-digit day, for example 1 or 30
y two-digit year, for example 09 or 12
D two-digit day, for example 01 or 30
M two-digit month, for example 01 or 12
Y four-digit year, for example 2009 or 2013
a short name of weekday, for example Mon or Wed
A long name of weekday, for example Monday or Wednesday
b short name of month, for example Jan or Aug
B long name of month, for example January or August
v minimal-digit week, for example 3 or 37
V two-digit week, for example 03 or 37
h minimal-digit hour, for example 3 or 21
n minimal-digit minutes, for example 5 or 42
s minimal-digit seconds, for example 7 or 47
H two-digit hour, for example 03 or 21
N two-digit minutes, for example 05 or 42
S two-digit seconds, for example 07 or 47
The characters 'v', 'V', 'a' and 'A' can only be used for for‐
matting printed dates (not to parse them).
The string may also contain other characters to act as spacers,
or formatting. Examples for other values of dateformat:
d/m/Y would use for input and output 24/7/2009
yMD would use for input and output 090724
M-D-Y would use for input and output 07-24-2009
Examples for other values of dateformat.report:
a D b Y (V) would do an output as "Fri 24 Jul 2009
(30)"
A, B D, Y would do an output as "Friday, July 24,
2009"
wV a Y-M-D would do an output as "w30 Fri 2009-07-24"
yMD.HN would do an output as "110124.2342"
m/d/Y H:N would do an output as "1/24/2011 10:42"
a D b Y H:N:S would do an output as "Mon 24 Jan 2011
11:19:42"
Undefined fields are put to their minimal valid values (1 for
month and day and 0 for hour, minutes and seconds) when there is
at least one more global date field that is set. Otherwise,
they are set to the corresponding values of "now". For example:
8/1/2013 with m/d/Y implies August 1, 2013 at midnight
(inferred)
8/1 20:40 with m/d H:N implies August 1, 2013 (inferred)
at 20:40
weekstart=Sunday
Determines the day a week starts. Valid values are Sunday or
Monday only. The default value is "Sunday".
displayweeknumber=yes
Determines if week numbers are displayed when using the "task
calendar" command. The week number is dependent on the day a
week starts. The default value is "yes".
due=7 This is the number of days into the future that define when a
task is considered due, and is colored accordingly. The default
value is 7.
calendar.details=sparse
If set to full running "task calendar" will display the details
of tasks with due dates that fall into the calendar period. The
corresponding days will be color-coded in the calendar. If set
to sparse only the corresponding days will be color coded and no
details will be displayed. The displaying of due dates with
details is turned off by setting the variable to none. The
default value is "sparse".
calendar.details.report=list
The report to run when displaying the details of tasks with due
dates when running the "task calendar" command. The default
value is "list".
calendar.offset=off
If "on" the first month in the calendar report is effectively
changed by the offset value specified in calendar.offset.value.
It defaults to "off".
calendar.offset.value=-1
The offset value to apply to the first month in the calendar
report. The default value is "-1".
calendar.holidays=full
If set to full running "task calendar" will display holidays in
the calendar by color-coding the corresponding days. A detailed
list with the dates and names of the holidays is also shown. If
set to sparse only the days are color-coded and no details on
the holidays will be displayed. The displaying of holidays is
turned off by setting the variable to none. The default value
is "none".
calendar.legend=yes
Determines whether the calendar legend is displayed. The
default value is "yes".
JOURNAL ENTRIES
journal.time=no
May be yes or no, and determines whether the 'start' and 'stop'
commands should record an annotation when being executed. The
default value is "no". The text of the corresponding annotations
is controlled by:
journal.time.start.annotation=Started task
The text of the annotation that is recorded when executing the
start command and having set journal.time.
journal.time.stop.annotation=Stopped task
The text of the annotation that is recorded when executing the
stop command and having set journal.time.
journal.info=on
When enabled, this setting causes a change log of each task to
be displayed by the 'info' command. Default value is "on".
HOLIDAYS
Holidays are entered either directly in the .taskrc file or via an
include file that is specified in .taskrc. For each holiday the name
and the date is required to be given:
holiday.towel.name=Day of the towel
holiday.towel.date=20100525
holiday.sysadmin.name=System Administrator Appreciation
Day
holiday.sysadmin.date=20100730
Dates are to be entered according to the setting in the datefor‐
mat.holiday variable.
The following holidays are computed automatically: Good Friday
(goodfriday), Easter (easter), Easter monday (eastermonday),
Ascension (ascension), Pentecost (pentecost). The date for these
holidays is the given keyword:
holiday.eastersunday.name=Easter
holiday.eastersunday.date=easter
Note that the taskwarrior distribution contains example holiday files
that can be included like this:
include /usr/local/share/doc/task/rc/holidays.en-US.rc
monthsperline=3
Determines how many months the "task calendar" command renders
across the screen. Defaults to however many will fit. If more
months than will fit are specified, taskwarrior will only show
as many that will fit.
DEPENDENCIES
dependency.reminder=on
Determines whether dependency chain violations generate
reminders.
dependency.confirmation=yes
Determines whether dependency chain repair requires confirma‐
tion.
COLOR CONTROLS
color=on
May be "on" or "off". Determines whether taskwarrior uses color.
When "off", will use dashes (-----) to underline column head‐
ings.
fontunderline=on
Determines if font underlines or ASCII dashes should be used to
underline headers, even when color is enabled.
Taskwarrior has a number of coloration rules. They correspond to a
particular attribute of a task, such as it being due, or being active,
and specifies the automatic coloring of that task. A list of valid
colors, depending on your terminal, can be obtained by running the com‐
mand:
task color
Note that no default values are listed here - the defaults now
correspond to the dark-256.theme (Linux) and dark-16.theme
(other) theme values. The coloration rules are as follows:
color.due.today Task is due today
color.active Task is started, therefore active.
color.scheduled Task is scheduled, therefore ready for work.
color.blocking Task is blocking another in a dependency.
color.blocked Task is blocked by a dependency.
color.overdue Task is overdue (due some time prior to now).
color.due Task is coming due.
color.project.none Task does not have an assigned project.
color.tag.none Task has no tags.
color.tagged Task has at least one tag.
color.recurring Task is recurring.
color.pri.H Task has priority H.
color.pri.M Task has priority M.
color.pri.L Task has priority L.
color.pri.none Task has no priority.
color.completed Task is completed.
color.deleted Task is deleted.
To disable a coloration rule for which there is a default, set
the value to nothing, for example:
color.tagged=
See the task-color(5) man pages for color details.
Certain attributes like tags, projects and keywords can have their own
coloration rules.
color.tag.X=yellow
Colors any task that has the tag X.
color.project.X=on green
Colors any task assigned to project X.
color.keyword.X=on blue
Colors any task where the description or any annotation contains
X.
color.uda.X=on green
Colors any taks that has the user defined attribute X.
color.error=green
Colors any of the error messages.
color.header=green
Colors any of the messages printed prior to the report output.
color.footnote=green
Colors any of the messages printed last.
color.summary.bar=on green
Colors the summary progress bar. Should consist of a background
color.
color.summary.background=on black
Colors the summary progress bar. Should consist of a background
color.
color.calendar.today=black on cyan
Color of today in calendar.
color.calendar.due=black on green
Color of days with due tasks in calendar.
color.calendar.due.today=black on magenta
Color of today with due tasks in calendar.
color.calendar.overdue=black on red
Color of days with overdue tasks in calendar.
color.calendar.weekend=bright white on black
Color of weekend days in calendar.
color.calendar.holiday=black on bright yellow
Color of holidays in calendar.
color.calendar.weeknumber=black on white
Color of weeknumbers in calendar.
color.label=
Colors the report labels. Defaults to not use color.
color.alternate=on rgb253
Color of alternate tasks. This is to apply a specific color to
every other task in a report, which can make it easier to vis‐
ually separate tasks. This is especially useful when tasks are
displayed over multiple lines due to long descriptions or anno‐
tations.
color.history.add=on red
color.history.done=on green
color.history.delete=on yellow
Colors the bars on the ghistory report graphs. Defaults to red,
green and yellow bars.
color.burndown.pending=on red
color.burndown.started=on yellow
color.burndown.done=on green
Colors the bars on the burndown reports graphs. Defaults to
red, green and yellow bars.
color.undo.before=red
color.undo.after=green
Colors used by the undo command, to indicate the values both
before and after a change that is to be reverted.
color.sync.added=green
color.sync.changed=yellow
color.sync.rejected=red
Colors the output of the merge command.
rule.precedence.color=due.today,active,blocking,blocked,over‐
due,due,scheduled,keyword.,project.,tag.,uda.,recur‐
ring,pri.,tagged,completed,deleted
This setting specifies the precedence of the color rules, from
highest to lowest. Note that the prefix 'color.' is omitted
(for brevity), and that any wildcard value (color.tag.XXX) is
shortened to 'tag.', which places all specific tag rules at the
same precedence, again for brevity.
color.debug=green
Colors all debug output, if enabled.
URGENCY
The urgency calculation uses a polynomial with several terms, each of
which has a configurable coefficient. Those coefficients are:
urgency.next.coefficient=15.0
Urgency coefficient for 'next' special tag
urgency.blocking.coefficient=8.0
Urgency coefficient for blocking tasks
urgency.blocked.coefficient=-5.0
Urgency coefficient for blocked tasks
urgency.due.coefficient=12.0
Urgency coefficient for due dates
urgency.priority.coefficient=6.0
Urgency coefficient for priorities
urgency.waiting.coefficient=-3.0
Urgency coefficient for waiting status
urgency.active.coefficient=4.0
Urgency coefficient for active tasks
urgency.scheduled.coefficient=5.0
Urgency coefficient for scheduled tasks
urgency.project.coefficient=1.0
Urgency coefficient for projects
urgency.tags.coefficient=1.0
Urgency coefficient for tags
urgency.annotations.coefficient=1.0
Urgency coefficient for annotations
urgency.age.coefficient=2.0
Urgency coefficient for the age of tasks
urgency.age.max=365
Maximum age in days. After this number of days has elapsed, the
urgency of a task won't increase any more because of aging.
urgency.user.tag.<tag>.coefficient=...
Specific tag coefficient.
urgency.user.project.<project>.coefficient=...
Specific project coefficient. urgency.uda.<name>.coeffi‐
cient=...
Presence/absence of UDA data.
The coefficients reflect the relative importance of the various
terms in the urgency calculation. These are default values, and
may be modified to suit your preferences, but it is important
that you carefully consider any modifications. See the original
RFC-31 for complete details at: http://task‐
tools.org/gitweb/gitweb.cgi?p=rfc.git;a=blob_plain;f=rfc31-urgency.txt;hb=HEAD
SHADOW FILE
shadow.file=$HOME/.task/shadow.txt
If specified, designates a file path that will be automatically
written to by taskwarrior, whenever the task database changes.
In other words, it is automatically kept up to date. The
shadow.command configuration variable is used to determine which
report is written to the shadow file. There is no color used in
the shadow file. This feature can be useful in maintaining a
current file for use by programs like GeekTool, Conky or Samur‐
ize.
shadow.command=list
This is the command that is run to maintain the shadow file,
determined by the shadow.file configuration variable. The format
is identical to that of default.command . Please see the corre‐
sponding documentation for that command.
shadow.notify=on
When this value is set to "on", taskwarrior will display a mes‐
sage whenever the shadow file is updated by some task command.
PUSH/PULL/MERGE
See the 'man task-synch' page for more details regarding usage.
merge.autopush=yes|no|ask
Determines post-merge behavior regarding automatic push.
merge.default.uri
Default merge URI.
pull.default.uri
Default pull URI.
push.default.uri
Default push URI.
DEFAULTS
default.project=foo
Provides a default project name for the task add command, if you
don't specify one. The default is blank.
default.priority=M
Provides a default priority for the task add command, if you
don't specify one. The default is blank.
default.due=...
Provides a default due date for the task add command, if you
don't specify one. The default is blank.
default.command=next
Provides a default command that is run every time taskwarrior is
invoked with no arguments. For example, if set to:
default.command=project:foo list
then taskwarrior will run the "project:foo list" command if no
command is specified. This means that by merely typing
$ task
[task project:foo list]
ID Project Pri Description
1 foo H Design foo
2 foo Build foo
REPORTS
The reports can be customized by using the following configuration
variables. The output columns, their labels and the sort order can be
set using the corresponding variables for each report. Each report name
is used as a "command" name. For example
task overdue
report.X.description
The description for report X when running the "task help" com‐
mand.
report.X.columns
The columns that will be used when generating the report X.
Valid columns are: id, uuid, status, project, priority, prior‐
ity_long, entry, start, end, due, countdown, countdown_compact,
age, age_compact, active, tags, depends, description_only,
description, recur, recurrence_indicator, tag_indicator and
wait. The IDs are separated by commas.
report.X.labels
The labels for each column that will be used when generating
report X. The labels are a comma separated list.
report.X.sort
The sort order of the tasks in the generated report X. The sort
order is specified by using the column ids post-fixed by a "+"
for ascending sort order or a "-" for descending sort order. The
sort IDs are separated by commas. For example:
report.list.sort=due+,priority-,active-,project+
report.X.filter
This adds a filter to the report X so that only tasks matching
the filter criteria are displayed in the generated report.
report.X.dateformat
This adds a dateformat to the report X that will be used by the
"due date" column. If it is not set then dateformat.report and
dateformat will be used in this order. See the DATES section for
details on the sequence placeholders.
report.X.annotations
This adds the possibility to control the output of annotations
for a task in a report. See the annotations variable for details
on the possible values. Deprecated.
report.X.limit
An optional value to a report limiting the number of displayed
tasks in the generated report. Deprecated.
Taskwarrior comes with a number of predefined reports, which are:
next Lists the most important tasks.
long Lists all pending tasks and all data, matching the specified
criteria.
list Lists all tasks matching the specified criteria.
ls Short listing of all tasks matching the specified criteria.
minimal
Minimal listing of all tasks matching the specified criteria.
newest Shows the newest tasks.
oldest Shows the oldest tasks.
overdue
Lists overdue tasks matching the specified criteria.
active Lists active tasks matching the specified criteria.
completed
Lists completed tasks matching the specified criteria.
recurring
Lists recurring tasks matching the specified criteria.
waiting
Lists all waiting tasks matching the specified criteria.
all Lists all tasks matching the specified criteria.
blocked
Lists all tasks that have dependencies.
USER DEFINED ATTRIBUTES
User defined attributes (UDAs) are an extension mechanism that allows
you to define new attributes for Taskwarrior to store and display. One
such example is an 'estimate' attribute that could be used to store
time estimates associated with a task. This 'estimate' attribute is
not built in to Taskwarrior, but with a few simple configuration set‐
tings you can instruct Taskwarrior to store this item, and provide
access to it for custom reports and filters.
This allows you to augment Taskwarrior to accommodate your workflow, or
bend the rules and use Taskwarrior to store and synch data that is not
necessarily task-related.
One important restriction is that because this is an open system that
allows the definition of any new attribute, Taskwarrior cannot under‐
stand the meaning of that attribute. So while Taskwarrior will faith‐
fully store, modify, report, sort and filter your UDA, it does not
understand anything about it. For example if you define a UDA named
'estimate', Taskwarrior will not know that this value is weeks, hours,
minutes, money, or some other resource count.
uda.<name>.type=string|numeric|date|duration
Defines a UDA called '<name>', of the specified type.
uda.<name>.label=<column heading>
Provides a default report label for the UDA called '<name>'.
uda.<name>.values=A,B,C
For type 'string' UDAs only, this provides a comma-separated
list of acceptable values. In this example, the '<name>' UDA
may only contain values 'A', 'B', or 'C', but may also contain
no value.
Example 'estimate' UDA
This example shows an 'estimate' UDA that stores specific values
for the size of a task.
uda.estimate.type=string
uda.estimate.label=Size Estimate
uda.estimate.values=trivial,small,medium,large,huge
CREDITS & COPYRIGHTS
Copyright (C) 2006 - 2013 P. Beckingham, F. Hernandez.
This man page was originally written by Federico Hernandez.
Taskwarrior is distributed under the MIT license. See http://www.open‐
source.org/licenses/mit-license.php for more information.
SEE ALSOtask(1), task-tutorial(5), task-faq(5), task-color(5), task-sync(5)
For more information regarding taskwarrior, see the following:
The official site at
<http://taskwarrior.org>
The official code repository at
<git://tasktools.org/task.git/>
You can contact the project by emailing
<support@taskwarrior.org>
REPORTING BUGS
Bugs in taskwarrior may be reported to the issue-tracker at
<http://taskwarrior.org>
task 2.2.0 2013-04-07 taskrc(5)