
But getting organized doesn’t have to be stressful. Trying to choose a new task management app can feel about as overwhelming as implementing a new organization system for your work life. If you’ve missed another due date and need to get better at task management, or you just want a new tool for your to-do lists, you likely know that there are a billion options for task managers, and each one has trillion features. Un-freaking-acceptable.There’s a reason people have been writing to-do lists since before there was paper–life is complicated, the human brain is messy, and sometimes you’re going to forget important tasks. If that option is more popular/requested and they wanted to change the default behavior, fine, but WE should have been warned, and we should at least have the option of using the previous method (either across the board, or on specific tasks).Īs it stands, I am needing to spend hours recreating my repeating tasks and projects, and still cannot be certain that I have found everything that I need. I used this in many, many cases and was even frustrated that that option hasn't been avaiable on mobile. I understand the use-case and the desire to have subtasks disappear, but the fact is there has always been a way to hide completed sub-tasks (hold SHIFT while clicking the complete box). At the very least this change should have been announced, giving us time to alter our processes. For EACH task that has literally disappeared from my set-up). I have to manually scan for them in the history-continually clicking "load more history", find the task title, search for the item, find the item, then uncheck it. Many of these repeating subtasks had links and specific info associated with them, and I am now having to troll through my activity history to find and restore these tasks (and by the way, I can't even restore them directly from my activity history.

Since it is a repeating task, the completed subtasks used to stay listed below the parent, meaning the next week I could start the process again. I have a document that I create every week, by following a set of steps. But breaking a feature that has been an integral aspect of the methodology is simply unacceptable.
