![]() All I have to do is regularly triage my Todoist Inbox by adding due dates and reminders as needed to these imported tasks and sorting them into their appropriate projects. With this simple shortcut, I can quickly convert all of my hand-written tasks from a meeting into actionable tasks in Todoist that are much harder to forget about. Sharing the converted text from GoodNotes to this shortcut takes each line of text, converts it to Title Case, and add it as an individual task to my Todoist Inbox. All we need to get this list of tasks from GoodNotes to Todoist is a Shortcut with five actions: Five simple actions takes my handwritten task list and sends each individual item to my Todoist Inbox. Importantly, the generated text also maintains the separate lines we enforced with our five-bullet custom GoodNotes template - which means parsing this snippet of text with Shortcuts is a trivially easy task. It ends up looking something like this: Using the Lasso Tool to select hand-written tasks allows you to convert it to text and share it with another app.like Shortcuts. Using the lasso tool to select a handful of to-do items in the template we just made gives us the option to “Convert” those items into text. ![]() Perhaps a lesser-known feature of GoodNotes is its built-in ability to convert handwriting into text for saving or sharing to other apps, presumably using the same Vision framework that powers its document OCR. Step 2: Tying GoodNotes and Todoist Together with Shortcuts The small degree of structure added by five bulleted lines in a roundrect enclosure is an important ingredient in the success of this system (more on that in a moment) - that said, your own custom GoodNotes template may work just as well (if not better) for your specific needs. I also added a subtle “Date” line to my usual GoodNotes template, since I was going through all this effort anyway. I intentionally chose to match the font and bullet colors with the the standard GoodNotes ruled lines, so that when I didn’t need to add any tasks that area would not be too distracting. I opted for a small bubble in the bottom left with enough space for five tasks at any given time. This was simple enough - export a blank GoodNotes page to PDF, and use Graphic (or any other vector graphic app) to add an area to the document specifically to accept hand-written to-dos in a consistent format. Luckily, GoodNotes has excellent support for custom notebook templates, so I set out to modify the standard GoodNotes line-ruled notebook template for my purposes. The first step in connecting my GoodNotes task lists with Todoist is creating a standardized format for when I do jot down to-dos in a given GoodNotes document. Step 1: A Template for Hand-Written To-Dos ![]() It’s this bit of my legacy system that need some integration with the new system centered around Todoist. I very frequently jot down to-dos during meetings and brainstorming sessions in GoodNotes, but this method has the major flaw of my quickly-scribbled tasks disappearing in GoodNotes and never actually being completed. My previous system involved a mix of calendar events, Due reminders (an app I’ve praised highly before), and hand-written task lists in various GoodNotes documents spanning all areas of my life. Thanks to the helpful folks on the Relay FM Members Discord, I’ve settled on Todoist as the task manager that best suits my needs. After listening to Cortex #101: Productivity 101, I’ve finally decided to give a real task manager an honest try. ![]()
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