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Ticktick free vs premium
Ticktick free vs premium









ticktick free vs premium

The distinction is that the exclamation mark will move the next occurrence of the event.

ticktick free vs premium

Second, Todoist lets you use every! in addition to every. For example, every day until Friday would give you five occurrences of the task if today was Monday. First, you can put an end date on your recurrence and it will understand. Todoist seems to have a leg up with smart dates in two ways, however. TickTick also lets you choose whether you want the text of your date/time to remain in the task title, which is a nice little feature Todoist will remove it no matter what. Both let you choose which day is your start of the week, but only Todoist seems to let you actually pick which day of the week “next week” should be. In fact, both apps can even interpret “next week” and set the task due at the start of next week. It’s pretty incredible some of the plain English verbiage you can use that will be interpreted: every other week, mid January, in three days, etc. These are very powerful in that beyond the standard “tomorrow at 4pm”, they also recognize dates like “every thursday” or “next saturday”. What that means is that you can just type the date in the text of your task and both apps will set the date (and time) that you specify. Both TickTick and Todoist will default to the inbox if you don’t specify a project or list.īoth apps have “smart date” parsing available. If you’re like me, you focus on adding a task quickly and just have it dump to the inbox for processing later. Both have keyboard shortcuts available so you can simply type a task out and have tags/labels added, due dates, and moved to a specific project or list. TickTick has a box to start typing right at the top of the page, or you can hit n to bring up the quick add. Todoist has you click a + symbol at the top to popup a little entry box, or you can hit q to bring up the quick add. Without further ado …īoth Todoist and TickTick have quick and easy ways to enter tasks. If you don’t plan to pay for either premium version, I suggest you continue reading, decide which features are most important to you, and then compare the free versions of both ( here and here). My goal was to give people the tools to decide which of these two tools best meets their needs or fits with their process.

#Ticktick free vs premium android#

I compared the premium offerings of both primarily in the web version but also on my Android phone (running Android O) this offered the best oranges-to-oranges comparison. I didn’t pick a “winner”, I merely compared offerings in several categories and then gave a few pros and cons of each. However, I had recently been hearing a lot of hub-bub about TickTick and decided to take a look at their offering and compare it with Todoist. I’ve been using Todoist for several months and am really starting to develop and trust my system with it.











Ticktick free vs premium