#routine
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  • 1.
    Daily Routine
    7 months ago by sechan100
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    Score: 38/100
    The Daily Routine plugin helps users manage recurring and one-time tasks within Obsidian. It enables the creation of routine notes, which automatically generate daily, capturing scheduled, weekly, or daily tasks. Users can also track one-time tasks through a structured todo system. The plugin integrates a calendar view, allowing tasks to be displayed on specific dates for better organization. Additionally, it provides insights into task completion and consistency through visual statistics. With full mobile support, users can maintain their routines seamlessly across devices, ensuring an efficient workflow for habit tracking and daily planning.
  • 2.
    Superstition
    10 months ago by Jeffry
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    Score: 31/100
    The Superstition Plugin brings a fun, unique twist to productivity in Obsidian by reinterpreting the Chinese calendar's "宜/忌" (Suitable/Unsuitable) concept. This plugin lets users assign activities they'd like to limit-like installing new plugins, switching themes, or reorganizing folders-and set "permitted" intervals for each task. For example, you might allow plugin installations every two weeks, or theme changes once a month. Each day, you can check your list to see what activities are recommended or "forbidden," adding a bit of playful constraint to your routine and helping curb impulsive productivity distractions. Perfect for users looking for a lighthearted productivity nudge.
  • 3.
    Tiny Habits
    10 days ago by Diego Nazoa
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    Score: 29/100
    Category: Productivity Tools
    The Tiny Habits plugin helps you track personal routines directly inside your notes, storing all data within frontmatter so nothing leaves your vault. It displays a heatmap-style table similar to GitHub or Anki, making it easy to visualise progress over time. Each habit entry can be marked as completed, failed, skipped, or not started, giving a clear picture of consistency. You can create multiple habit blocks in a file, collapse large tables, and even navigate past and future entries. Keyboard support is included, with both arrow keys and vim-style hjkl shortcuts for moving around and marking entries. Configuration is simple, using code blocks that point to a folder path and optional display names. By blending habit tracking into Markdown, it combines accountability with the flexibility of your existing note-taking workflow.