Quick reference

Every icon, explained.

A visual glossary of the glyphs you'll see across the app — what each one means, and where it tends to live.

Status cycler

The little squircle on the left of every to-do row. Tap to advance through the cycle.

To do

The starting state. Nothing's been done with this row yet.

In progress

You've started this. It's mid-flight, not finished.

Blocked

Stuck on something out of your hands. Ready to resume when the blocker clears.

Paused

Recurring rows only. Halts a habit or recurring to-do without deleting it.

Done

Complete. Strikes through the title. The good one.

Bottom tabs

The five surfaces of the app. They share data; each one frames it differently.

Day

Today's timed schedule. Events and time-anchored items.

To-do

The dedicated task list, organised by buckets (Morning, Afternoon, custom).

Week

Seven-day digest. Drag-to-reschedule lives here.

Habits

Routines and the past-week check-in grid.

Nook

Save-for-later. Articles, links, books, podcasts, videos, notes.

Row actions

Live in the action row of an expanded to-do, event, or habit. Tap to toggle or open a popover.

Reminder

Schedule a notification. Pick a time and an offset (at time, 5/15/30 min, 1/2 hr).

Deadline

Marks a date this thing is due by, distinct from when it's scheduled.

Palette

Override the row's left-edge bar colour for this item. Doesn't affect the category.

Meaningful

Star this. It surfaces in the carousel at the top of every day — the quiet reminder.

Pin

Keeps this row at the top of its bucket regardless of the usual sort order.

Recurrent

Make this repeat. Daily, weekly with day picker, weekends, every-N-days, annually.

Delete

Remove the row. On a recurring item, you'll be asked: this one, this and future, or whole series.

Expand

Open or close a row's full editor. Tap the chevron, not the row body.

Nook item types

The icon on the left of a Nook row tells you what kind of saved thing it is. Picked when you add the item.

Note

Plain text. The default. For thoughts, drafts, fragments.

Link

A URL with optional notes. Tap to open in your browser.

Article

A read-it-later piece. Same as a link, but flagged as longer-form.

Book

Something you want to read or are reading. Title, optional URL, body for notes.

Podcast

An episode or show worth coming back to. Body's good for timestamps.

Video

A YouTube link, a talk, a tutorial — anything you want to remember to watch.

Want the full feature walkthrough? Read the guide.