From 55be11767e909447b7e617bf7de1c3cdfcc03df3 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Gina Trapani Date: Thu, 5 Dec 2013 20:37:30 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] Remove double title --- Home.textile => TODO.TXT-Command-Line-Interface.textile | 2 -- 1 file changed, 2 deletions(-) rename Home.textile => TODO.TXT-Command-Line-Interface.textile (96%) diff --git a/Home.textile b/TODO.TXT-Command-Line-Interface.textile similarity index 96% rename from Home.textile rename to TODO.TXT-Command-Line-Interface.textile index b9ab1d4..1003a37 100644 --- a/Home.textile +++ b/TODO.TXT-Command-Line-Interface.textile @@ -1,5 +1,3 @@ -h1. TODO.TXT Command Line Interface - If you've got a file called @todo.txt@ on your computer right now, you're in the right place. Countless software applications and web sites can manage your to-do list with all sorts of bells and whistles. But if you don't want to depend on someone else's data format or someone else's server, a plain text file is the way to go. Problem is, you don't want to launch a full-blown text editor every time you need to add an item to your to-do list, or mark one that's already there as complete. With a simple but powerful shell script called @todo.sh@, you can interact with @todo.txt@ at the command line for quick and easy, Unix-y access.