If the task doesn’t appear in one of your apps, it means Todoist for Web is failing to sync. If your added task does appear in Todoist for Web, try adding a new task in Todoist for Web and see if it shows up on your other Todoist apps.If it doesn’t appear, the app in which you added a task is the one having trouble syncing.Add a task from another platform (for example, in your mobile app) and see if it appears in Todoist for Web.Make sure you have the latest version of your task list (the one stored on our servers) by first logging out of Todoist for Web and then logging back in again.You can identify this by following the steps below: If you've tried all the above steps and your app still isn’t syncing correctly, report it to our support team as a technical issue and include the information below: Still not working? Report it to our Support team I think it’s best to not use descriptions in Todoist at all for the content, but rather leave all content in the Markdown file and write a link to the Obsidian file in the description.In order to avoid losing your unsynced changes, note which tasks or data are not syncing before logging out of your account and in again, clearing cache, or reinstalling the app.
![todoist calendar integration todoist calendar integration](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/34/01/38/34013818642d333a8a8910afc1d7b7c7--todoist-calendar-app.jpg)
#TODOIST CALENDAR INTEGRATION FULL#
Todoist descriptions can’t be longer than 500 characters, so you can’t easily sync full notes.because there’s no “previous state” (unless you add something like a previous-state file or db) you’ll have assume that everything in a changed file would be the “wanted state” and upload it all, which might lead to sync conflicts if something on the other end also changed at the same time Looking for file changes can be resource intensive and not always efficient.
![todoist calendar integration todoist calendar integration](https://www.timecamp.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/pomodone-todoist-integration.jpg)
you need to be able to run a Python script doing the syncing in the background. Some (already) known caveats (there might be many): I’ll keep working for now on the two-way Google Calendar sync but want to explore this idea further. Let me know if you have any ideas suggestions for this approach. I couldn’t find the author Dominik Schlund ( on the forums? I’ve seen that there’s also which seems pretty interesting, but is only one-way sync and use a proprietary/private remote API (which is fine, but not what I’d like in the long run). I also have no idea how efficient a sync API could/would run inside Obsidian, although Obsidian probably providers good mechanisms to get updates on (local) changes remote changes could be more intensive (don’t know JS/TS well enough for that) Also there’s no official sync API Typescript implementation (there is one for the REST api), although there are some bits and pieces out there that could probably be used ( like this). I don’t see yet how I could make this could work using an internal Obsidian plugin, but that may be me lack of knowledge of Typescript / Javascript and writing plugins compared to Python. SQLite as intermediary could be replaced with e.g. I’m thinking of using Python as I’ve already been working on updating/rewriting this (old) plugin which builds two-way sync for Todoist and Google Calendar using an SQLite database as intermediary. completing a task) it would sync back to Todoist. This approach would mean that you could use the (synchronized) Markdown files in Obsidian with e.g.
#TODOIST CALENDAR INTEGRATION UPDATE#
![todoist calendar integration todoist calendar integration](https://media.idownloadblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/06/Sunrise-255x191.jpeg)
I’ve been using a very simple task management format of e.g. I’ve been looking at the various ways to manage my tasks with Obsidian.