From 42fe1040f5dadf9f8616d59d0bbcb74290c4dc45 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: qadzek <84473512+qadzek@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Thu, 16 May 2024 12:32:18 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Fix typos --- doc/wiki.txt | 12 ++++++------ 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/wiki.txt b/doc/wiki.txt index a564a6a..c433edd 100644 --- a/doc/wiki.txt +++ b/doc/wiki.txt @@ -299,7 +299,7 @@ and combine these summaries. I reserve my journal for work-related activities. This includes minutes of meetings or notes from events and courses. However, I don't use my journal to -log mundane tasks or other temporal acitivities. Instead, I keep a log of such +log mundane tasks or other temporal activities. Instead, I keep a log of such things in a related wiki page. For instance, I have a wiki page for my house where I keep a log of repairs and similar. @@ -309,11 +309,11 @@ I put TODOs that are not for the present week. This way, my journal serves as a task tracker where I write quick comments about tasks when I work on them. I generally avoid adding "real" information -content to my journal. a journal entry. Instead, I create links to my main -wiki and put valuable content there. This way, if I work on something, then -work on it again after a long break, the content is readily available when -I get back to it. In some cases, I do link from my wiki to a specific journal -entry - for instance when I refer to meeting notes. +content to my journal. Instead, I create links to my main wiki and put +valuable content there. This way, if I work on something, then work on it +again after a long break, the content is readily available when I get back to +it. In some cases, I do link from my wiki to a specific journal entry - for +instance when I refer to meeting notes. If I'm curious about what I did at a particular date, I use calendar.vim [9] to find the date and open the corresponding entry (see [10, 11] for my related