This app is just an Electron wrapper for Todoist's web version.
This app works with both Windows and Linux.
Arch Linux (Thanks to HadiLatifi)
The package is available in AUR. You can install it with trizen -S todoist-electron
-
Go to Releases page and get the RPM/DEB/EXE package.
-
Most of the time, a simple double-click on the downloaded package should start its installation (use shell commands otherwise).
Alternatively, you can also download the todoist-linux.zip
package from Releases page that can run on any Linux distro.
-
Ctrl+Alt+A - Quickly add a Task
-
Ctrl+Alt+Q - Show or Hide Todoist window
-
Ctrl+Alt+R - Refresh Todoist window content
-
Alt+F4 - Quit Todoist
-
F11 - Toggle Full-screen view
-
Any other possible shortcuts are available and usable directly from within the app itself.
Global shortcuts are configurable via $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/.todoist-linux.json
file (which is located in ~/.config
by default).
The file is simple JSON with descriptive keys and values that represents shortcuts and their keybindings.
Use this page from Electron docs to get a better understanding of what other modifiers (keys) exist that you can use.
Same config file .todoist-linux.json
has other options to configure the app:
tray-icon
- tray icon to use. Possible options:icon.png
,icon_monochrome.png
The main reason I don't like having the Todoist web version opened is that I can't easily ALT+TAB to it.
And I also really wanted to have global keyboard shortcuts so I can quickly add a task to Todoist.
The initial inspiration I took from this brilliant project of the same web version. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to be maintained anymore and has some issues with Tray functionality on latest Ubuntu.
The build process is very simple:
-
Clone the repo using
$ git clone https://github.com/krydos/todoist-linux
. -
Install project dependencies by running
$ make env
in project root directory. -
Now, to run the app, you can do
$ make up
in the project root directory (or$ npm run start
in thesrc
directory).
After making your changes, you can simply use any of the below commands to build 64-bit distribution packages.
- Run
$ make build-rpm
to build.rpm
packages (for Fedora/CentOS/RHEL/SuSE). - Run
$ make build-deb
to build.deb
packages (for Debian/Ubuntu and derivatives). - Run
$ make build-pacman
to build.pacman
packages (for Arch/Manjaro and derivatives). - Run
$ make build-win
to build Windows.exe
files. - Run
$ make build-linux
to build both.DEB
and.RPM
packages. - Run
$ make build-all
to build packages for both Windows and Linux (basically all the above).
No rules for contributing. Just send a pull request :)