TreeSheets (Cross-Platform Data Organizer) Now Open Source
Aardappel writes "TreeSheets has been available as freeware for Windows / Linux / OS X since 2008, but is now also Open Source (ZLIB license). TreeSheets is a cross between a spreadsheet (you can create grids) and an outliner (you can create grids inside grids) allowing you to create almost any structure to organize your data in."
Treat yourself and have a look at their screenshots, if you haven't already. They are rather snarky...
It's open source. Port it yourself, bum.
Whenever I use any kind of note taking app I always wish that there was a really good pen input system. Recently I tried out a Samsung tablet and was really impressed - it recognized by scrappy joined up handwriting and translated my scribbed diagrams into something nice and neat. Unfortunately nothing like that seems to exist for the desktop.
Apologies for being off-topic, but does anyone know of anything like this?
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
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This is wonderful news. I was feeling guilty about using this awesome tool, since I try to only use free/open software. But I haven't found anything like it; allowing you to add a whole grid within any grid box means you can keep as much detail as you want within any item (I use it for tasks in a can-ban structure).
The site says it's in the Ubuntu repos, but it's not there when I look. Is it submitted and just not propagated yet, or is there a PPA I need to enable?
Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
says my son.
I've just been playing with Treesheet. I don't think it would make for a good tablet app, at least for me. I can picture myself using the keyboard with it moreso than a mouse. I think I'd feel hindered on a tablet, much like I would with entering text using an onscreen keyboard. A note or message here or there is fine, but for anything larger...
Of course I could be wrong, and I look forward to seeing an android version soon.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
Gee whiz, looks good. I WANT IT. But my limit for mucking about trying to make something work in Linux is 60 minutes.
.... error while loading shared libraries: libgtk-x11-2.0.so.0 indeed....
Seriously, I'm using Mint, the bastard son of Ubuntu, so it should be easy.
Three Squirrels
It's a pretty interesting new take at things.
Downloaded and installed yesterday and played around with it a little. Quite nifty.
What bugs me is that on OS X, a lot of the keys it uses are assigned elsewhere and thus don't work. I'll have to figure out how to redefine the keyboard shortcuts, and the preferences dialog doesn't work. It's a beta, ok. I'm not complaining, just saying what I noticed.
The other thing is that right now I don't know what to use it for. But that might just be because I'm not a heavy spreadsheet user and if I use Numbers, the (missing in TreeSheets) calculation functions are exactly what I'm using it for.
Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
- The file format is not even remotely easily accessible with shell scripts. (No, exporting doesn't suffice. The XML doesn't even contain everything!)
- It doesn’t offer a DBus interface.
- It forces constant mouse-keyboard switching and even completely lacks keyboard support for important things.
Then what the hell is the damn point of even using it??
Each single one of those alone is a show-stopping deal breaker. Only a Wintard or iTard could ever consider this "normal" or acceptable.
Everyone who actually uses his computer, instead of playing with fixed-function appliances that happen to be implemented on a computer, would never put up with that shit. Not even when paid equitable remedy.
Am I the only one who initially read this as Three Sheets which is something different entirely?
The packages currently available for ubuntu are the old 32bit binaries, which you can't see if you're on 64bit. You can either use the 32bit version (you'll also need a 32bit gtk installed) or wait for ubuntu to supply the new version for both.
Looks like the TreeSheets website is down. The term slashdotted is still relevant, it seems.
So, while I wait for the site to resuscitate, anyone care to enlighten me on how TreeSheets is different from any old spreadsheet program down the street?