What is Daily Planner?
A daily planner lets you organize your day hour by hour with a clean visual timeline. Add tasks, appointments, and blocks of time to create a structured daily schedule. Your plans are saved locally so they persist between sessions.
Pick a date, choose the time interval (15, 30, or 60 minutes), then drop tasks into any slot. Each task gets a color category — work, personal, meeting, or break — plus an optional priority flag, so the day is scannable at a glance. Run a built-in 25-minute focus timer on any task, and export the day as a PDF or plain-text schedule. Everything saves per-date in local storage.
How to use
- Click on any hour slot to add a task or event for that time block.
- Edit the task name and optionally set a color category to visually organize your day.
- Navigate between dates using the date picker to plan ahead or review past schedules.
When to use
- Time-blocking deep work, meetings, and breaks the night before a busy day.
- Planning a study session split into focus blocks and rest periods.
- Printing a daily routine for kids or for the fridge as a visible reminder.
Result
Plan your workday: 9 AM — Team standup, 10 AM — Deep work on project, 12 PM — Lunch, 1 PM — Client call, 3 PM — Code review. Each block is color-coded by category.
FAQ
- Where are my saved plans stored?
- They live in your device's local storage, keyed by date. Clearing site data or switching devices removes them. Export any day as a PDF or a plain-text file to keep an archived copy.
- Can I plan more than one day ahead?
- Yes. Use the date picker or the arrow buttons to navigate to any future or past date. Each date keeps its own task list, so you can sketch out a full week or month and come back to edit it.
- What does changing the interval do?
- It controls how the day is sliced visually. 60 minutes gives one row per hour for a quick overview. 30 or 15 minutes is useful when you want to schedule short blocks like a standup, a focus sprint, or a coffee break.
- Can two tasks share the same time slot?
- You can add multiple tasks to one slot — they'll stack in the order added. That works well for parallel things like a call plus background work, or for noting a recurring break alongside its main task.
- Why use color categories instead of just task names?
- Color makes the day's shape obvious at a glance. Too much work-orange in a row signals you've skipped breaks; a healthy day usually has a mix. It's a quick visual audit of how the day is balanced.
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