🍅 pomo

pomo is a simple CLI for using the Pomodoro Technique. There are some amazing task management systems but pomo is more of a task execution or timeboxing system. pomo helps you track what you did, how long it took you to do it, and how much effort you expect it to take.

Background

The Pomodoro Technique is simple and effective:

Decide on a task you want to accomplish

Break the task into timed intervals (pomodoros), [approx. 25 min]

After each pomodoro take a short break [approx. 3 - 5 min]

Once all pomodoros are completed take a longer break [approx 15 - 20 min]

Repeat

Installation

Binaries

Binaries are available for Linux and OSX platforms in the releases section on github.

Installer Script

A bash script to download and verify the latest release for Linux and OSX platforms can be run with the following command:

curl -L -s https://kevinschoon.github.io/pomo/install.sh | bash /dev/stdin

Source

go get github.com/kevinschoon/pomo pomo -v

Usage

Once pomo is installed you need to initialize it’s database.

pomo init

Start a 4 pomodoro session at 25 minute intervals:

pomo start -t my-project "write some codes"

Configuration

Pomo has a few configuration options which can be read from a JSON file in Pomo’s state directory ~/.pomo/config.json .

colors

You can map colors to specific tags in the colors field.

Example:

{ "colors": { "my-project": "hiyellow", "another-project": "green" } }

Integrations

Status Bars

The Pomo CLI can output the current state of a running task session via the pomo status making it easy to script and embed it’s output in various Linux status bars.

You can create a module with the custom/script type and embed Pomo’s status output in your Polybar:

[module/pomo] type = custom/script interval = 1 exec = pomo status

Roadmap

Generate charts/burn down

??

Credits