![]() ![]() To avoid overwhelming people with options, we start off with just a few commonly-used fields visible by default: title, note, due date. It grows as you type, filling as much of the screen as you care to use. To add a note, for example, just tap on the note icon and the note field appears inline in the outline. Rather than constantly sending you to different screens, the notion behind this new design is that most of the common operations that you want to do-such as adding a task, editing its notes, adding attachments, setting due dates, etc.-should be possible right in the main outline. But neither of those should be central to the experience. We do still have navigation to get to other lists, of course, and we do still have the inspector for batch editing and for infrequently used fields. One of our big goals with this release was that your interaction should be centered on lists of tasks (really outlines)-not based around navigation (like the old iPhone home screen) or on inspector screens showing individual tasks. A good place to look for the latest status updates are in the TestFlight Release Notes on our website.Īs we rebuild the app after a decade of feedback from customers (along with our own experiences using the app), we’ve taken the opportunity to radically rethink and redesign some of the ways the app works. To all our new testers: I do hope you all enjoy the TestFlight as you finally get your hands on it-and would also like to apologize in advance for all the rough edges at this early stage! Rebuilding the interface from scratch means there’s over a decade of code being rebuilt.
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