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tdl(1)									tdl(1)

NAME
       tdl - To do list manager

SYNOPSIS
       tdl  [-q]
       tdl  [-q] add|edit|defer|log
       tdl  [-q] list|done|undo|report
       tdl  [-q] remove|above|below|into|clone|copyto
       tdl  [-q] postpone|ignore|open
       tdl  [-q] which|version|help
       tdla [-q]
       tdll [-q]
       tdld [-q]
       tdlg [-q]

DESCRIPTION
       A program for managing a to-do list.

       tdl has a set of functions that can be accessed in two different ways:

	   * Directly from the command line
	   * Interactively

       In  the 'direct' method, the function and its arguments are provided on
       the command line. This mode is useful if you only  want	to  perform  a
       single operation. An example

	   % tdl add "A task"
	   %

       The 'interactive' method is entered when the tdl command is run with no
       arguments. In this mode, many tdl operations may be performed within  a
       single  run of the program. This avoids loading and saving the database
       for each operation, which may have a small performance  benefit.	  How‐
       ever,  if  the program is compiled with the readline library, the <tab>
       key will provide various completion functions. An example

	   % tdl
	   tdl> add "A task"
	   tdl> exit
	   %

       When in interactive mode, these methods can be used to exit and	return
       to the shell:

       * The exit command (see exit command)
       * Hitting <Ctrl-D> (i.e. end of file on stdin)
       *  Hitting  <Ctrl-C>, <Ctrl-> etc. The associated signals are caught by
       tdl and it will attempt to save the database. However, this  method  is
       more risky than the first two.
       *  The quit command (see quit command). Caution: this does not save the
       modified database back to the disk. Only use it if you want to  discard
       all changes made in this tdl run.

       All  forms  may take -q as the first command line argument.  Currently,
       this suppresses the warning message if  no  existing  database  can  be
       found.	The intended use is for using tdll when changing into a direc‐
       tory, to list outstanding work in that directory.

       Any command that modifies the database will rename the old database  to
       a  file called .tdldb.bak before writing out the new .tdldb (The backup
       file will be in the same directory as the main one.)  This  allows  for
       one  level of database recovery, if the database is corrupted or a com‐
       mand is issued in error which causes large losses of data (e.g.	misuse
       of the remove command.)

SUBCOMMANDS
       tdl above index_to_insert_above index_to_move ...
       tdl before index_to_insert_above index_to_move ...

       This  command  moves one or more entries to a new location in the tree.
       The first index specifies the entry which will end up immediately below
       the  moved  entries  after  the	operation.  As a special case, you can
       specify the final component of the first argument  as  zero.   In  this
       case,  the moved entries appear as the last children of the parent node
       afterwards.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl add [@datespec] [parent_index] [priority] text_for_node
       tdla [@datespec] [parent_index] [priority] text_for_node

       The add command is used to add a new entry to the database.

       datespec is the time at which the entry will be visible when the	 data‐
       base is printed with the list command.  It defaults to now.  The format
       for datespec is described in the DATE SPECIFICATION  section  later  in
       this page.

       parent_index  is	 the  index  of the parent node (e.g. 1 or 2.4).  This
       defaults to the root node if missing, i.e. a  new  top-level  entry  is
       created.

       priority is one of urgent, high, normal, low or verylow.	 Normal is the
       default if this argument is not specified.  Priorities may be  abbrevi‐
       ated (even to just the first letter.)

       text_for_node  is the text describing the task for this entry.  If this
       is more than a single word, you will need to quote it to make the shell
       keep  it as a single argument to tdl.  The text may span multiple lines
       (i.e. if you hit return whilst the quotation marks are  still  open  in
       the shell.)

       If no database exists, the add command will create it automatically (in
       the current directory, unless the TDL_DATABASE environment is  set,  in
       which case this specifies the path to use).

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl below index_to_insert_below index_to_move ...
       tdl after index_to_insert_below index_to_move ...

       This  command  moves one or more entries to a new location in the tree.
       The first index specifies the entry which will end up immediately above
       the  moved  entries  after  the	operation.  As a special case, you can
       specify the final component of the first argument  as  zero.   In  this
       case, the moved entries appear as the first children of the parent node
       afterwards.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl clone index_to_clone ...

       The clone command can be used to make  a	 deep  copy  of	 one  or  more
       entries	and  add  them	as  new top-level entries in the database. You
       might use this if you have a task with a set of subtasks, and find that
       the  same  subtasks  apply  to  some new task. You could copy the first
       task, and edit the new top-level task to change its text.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl copyto new_parent_index index_to_clone ...

       The copyto command is very similar to the clone command. The difference
       is  that	 copyto	 inserts  the  newly created entries as children of an
       existing entry, rather than making them new top level entries.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl create

       This command is used to create a .tdldb file in the  current  directory
       (or  at	the  location  specified by the environment variable TDL_DATA‐
       BASE).  If the database file is already found to exist, a warning  will
       be printed and the command has no effect.

       The  situation  where you are likely to use this command is where there
       is already a .tdldb file in another directory further up the path  from
       this  one.  Most of the tdl commands will find and use this other data‐
       base file, assuming that you want to share it across all	 the  directo‐
       ries  in	 the  tree.  You might want to use a single database across an
       entire large project, for example.  The create command will ignore  any
       .tdldb  file  found  in	an  ancestor directory.	 It always operates in
       either the current directory or on the file pointed to by TDL_DATABASE.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl defer [@datespec] index_to_change...

       The defer command is used to modify  the	 start-time  of	 one  or  more
       existing	 entries,  where the @ on the datespec is optional because the
       argument is required, although the @ can be  included  for  consistency
       with other commands where a datespec is optional.

       An example of use is

	    tdl> defer @+fri 1 2.1... 5

       which  defers entries 1, 2.1 and all its children, and 5 until the fol‐
       lowing Friday.  To list deferred	 entries,  use	list  -p  ,  to	 defer
       entries indefinitely, see postpone command.  To re-activate deferred or
       postponed entries, see open command.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl done @datespec index_of_done_entry ...
       tdld @datespec index_of_done_entry ...

       The done command is used to mark one or more tasks as  completed.   The
       effects are as follows:

       o      The  entries no longer appear on the default listing (tdl list /
	      tdll)

       o      The entries are eligible to  appear  on  the  report  list  (tdl
	      report)

       o      The  entries  are eligible for removal by the purge command (tdl
	      purge.)

       If the string "..." is appended to an index, it means  that  entry  and
       all  its	 descendents.	This provides a quick way to mark a whole sub-
       tree of tasks as being completed.

       datespec is the time at which the entry/entries	should	be  marked  as
       having  been  completed.	  The default is to mark them completed at the
       current time.  The competion time of an entry  affects  whether	it  is
       shown by the report command for a particular range of reported times.

       The  format for datespec is described in the DATE SPECIFICATION section
       later in this page.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl edit index_to_change [new_text]

       This command is used to change the text of an entry.  If no  [new-text]
       is  provided,  you  will be prompted with the old text to edit interac‐
       tively. (This is only useful if	the  GNU  readline  library  has  been
       linked in.)

       Note,  in earlier versions, edit could be used to change the start-time
       of one or more entries. This is now handled by the defer command.

				     --ooOOoo--

       exit

       The exit command is used to exit from tdl when it is used  in  interac‐
       tive mode.  The exit command is not available in the command line mode,
       where it would not make sense.
       The exit command writes any pending  updates  to	 the  database	before
       exiting.	 Compare the quit command, which loses all updates made during
       the current tdl run.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl export filename index_to_export ...

       This command is used to create a new TDL database (whose name is	 given
       by  the	filename  argument).  The initial contents of the new database
       are the entries specified by the list of indices	 following  the	 file‐
       name,  in  that order.  Each index becomes a top-level entry of the new
       database.  The operation is read-only on the original database.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl help

       This command displays a summary of use of each of the commands.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl ignore index_to_ignore ...

       The ignore command puts one or more entries into an ignored  state.  It
       is actually implemented in the same way as marking them as done, but as
       though they were done a very long time ago. Thus, ignored entries  will
       be deleted by any subsequent purge operation.
       I  added this feature because, when applying remove to several entries,
       I kept getting tripped up by the indices changing below the entry  that
       was  removed  (I kept removing the wrong entries later by not using the
       revised indices).  Instead, I can ignore them and rely  on  a  periodic
       purge to clean up the database.
       Another	use  for  the ignore command would be to move moribund entries
       into a wastebasket to stop them cluttering up the normal	 listing,  but
       without removing them entirely in case you need to reprieve them later.
       If you need to un-ignore an entry, just undo it

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl import filename

       This  command  is  used to merge entries from the TDL database filename
       into the default TDL database (i.e. the one that most of the other com‐
       mands would be accessing).

       You  might  use	this command if you had a number of separate TDL data‐
       bases, and wanted to merge their entries to form one combo database.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl into new_parent_index indices_to_move ...

       This command moves one or more entries under a new parent entry.	 It is
       equivalent  to the above command when the new_parent_index argument has
       ".0" appended to it.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl  list  [-v]	[-a]  [-p]  [-m]  [-1...9]   [<min-priority>]	[<par‐
       ent_index>|<search_conditions>...]
       tdll   [-v]   [-a]   [-p]   [-m]	  [-1...9]   [<min-priority>]	[<par‐
       ent_index>|<search_conditions...]

       The list or it's synonymous ls command is used to display  the  entries
       in  the	database.   By default, only entries that have not been marked
       done and which don't have start times  deferred	into  the  future  are
       shown.	If  you	 want  to  display  all entries, include the -a option
       (which means 'all').  If you want to display the dates and  times  when
       the  entries were added and/or done, include the -v option (which means
       'verbose').  The -p option stands for postponed. It  means  that	 tasks
       which are 'deferred' or 'postponed' are shown as well as open tasks.

       By  default,  only  entries  having normal, high or urgent priority are
       shown.  To change the minimum priority shown, specify the  min-priority
       argument.   For	example, 'tdll h' will only show entries with priority
       high or urgent.

       By default, the whole database is scanned.  If you only	want  to  show
       part(s)	of the database, additional arguments can be given.  These are
       the indices of the top node of each part of the database	 you  want  to
       show.   So  if  your  database contains entries with indices 1, 2, 2.1,
       2.2, 2.2.1, 3 and 4, the command

       tdl list -a 2

       will show all entries 2, 2.1, 2.2 and 2.2.1, whether or	not  they  are
       completed.

       Also  by	 default,  all	entries in the database, at any depth, will be
       shown.  If you only wish to show 'top-level' entries, for example,  you
       can use

       tdl list -1

       This  lists  level-1  entries.	Any  level-1  entry  with hidden child
       entries underneath it will show a summary of  how  many	such  children
       there are.  For example, the output

       3 [2/7] A top level entry

       means  that  the entry with index 3 has a total of 7 entries underneath
       it, of which 2 are still open and 5 are	completed  (i.e.  they've  had
       'tdl done' applied to them.)

       Because	the  single  digit  arguments are used this way for the 'list'
       subcommand, the normal 'negative index' method can't be used to specify
       an  entry  a certain distance from the end of the list.	If you want to
       do this, use a syntax like

       tdl list -- -1

       to show the last index in the array, or

       tdl list -2 -- -3 -2 -1

       to show level-1 and level-2 entries within the last 3  level-1  entries
       in the list.

       Each search condition specifies a case-insensitive substring match that
       is applied to all parent indices further on in the  arguments.  (If  no
       parent indices are given, all the search conditions are and'ed together
       and applied to filter all the nodes that would be  shown	 according  to
       the depth, priority etc arguments).

       Each search condition takes one of the following forms

	   /substring
	   /substring/1

       In  each case, an entry will match if substring is actually a substring
       of the text of that entry. In the second form (where the number may  be
       0,  1,  2  or 3), a match occurs if there are up to that many errors in
       the substring. An error is a  single  character	inserted,  removed  or
       changed.

       This  option is most useful if you have a large database and can remem‐
       ber you have an entry  somewhere	 containing  particular	 word(s),  but
       can't remember where it is.

       If  you need regular expression matching, the best approach would be to
       run tdll from the shell and pipe	 the  output  to  grep.	 The  internal
       matching does approximate matches with keys up to 31 characters.

       By  default,  the listing is produced with colour highlighting.	The -m
       option can be used to produce a monochrome listing  instead.   Alterna‐
       tively,	the TDL_LIST_MONOCHROME enviroment variable can be set (to any
       value) to achieve the same effect.

       The colours are assigned as follows:

       ────────┬───────────────────────────────
       Colour  │  Meaning
       ────────┼───────────────────────────────
       Red     │  Urgent task
       Yellow  │  High priority task
       White   │  Normal priority task
       Cyan    │  Low priority task, done task
       Blue    │  Very low priority task
       Green   │  Captions
       ────────┴───────────────────────────────

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl log
       tdlg

       This command is used to add a new entry and mark it  done  immediately.
       It  is  most  useful  in conjunction with the report command, to record
       unexpected extra tasks you had to do.

       The arguments for the log command are the same as  those	 for  the  add
       command.

				     --ooOOoo--

       narrow new_root_index

       The  narrow  command can be used to limit the effects of later commands
       to operate within a particular sub-tree of your database.  Because  the
       indices	you  specify  for  the later operations have the common prefix
       omitted, this can save typing if you have many changes to  make	within
       the same subtree.

       If  your	 listings are in colour, the common prefix is coloured in blue
       whilst the paths below the root of the sub-tree are shown in the	 usual
       green.  (In monochrome mode, there is no distinction.)

       Whilst  your  view is narrowed, the index of the sub-tree root is shown
       in square brackets between tdl and > (i.e. [2]).

       If you want to operate on the sub-tree root entry itself whilst you are
       narrowed,  you can use . to specify its index (think: current directory
       in Unix.)

       To reverse the effects of the narrow command,  use  the	widen  command
       (see widen command).

       This  command  is  only	available when tdl is being run interactively,
       i.e. when you have a tdl prompt. It is not available directly from  the
       shell (where it wouldn't make much sense).

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl open index_to_reopen[...] ...

       The open command is used to reverse the effect of the postpone command.
       Its effect is actually to set the arrival time of the  entries  to  the
       current time.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl postpone index_to_postpone[...] ...

       The postpone command is used to make 1 more more entries postponed. Its
       effect is actually to set the arrival time of the entries a long way in
       the  future (i.e. it's an extreme form of the 'deferred' feature avail‐
       able through the add and defer commands.) Postponed entries can be  re-
       activated with the open command.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl pri new_priority index_to_change ...

       This  command changes the priority of one or more entries.  The indices
       are in the same format as those in the output of the list command.  The
       new_priority  argument  takes  the  same possible values as for the add
       command.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl purge since_epoch [entry_index...]

       This command is used to remove old done entries from the database.   It
       is much more convenient than repeated remove commands.

       The  since_epoch	 argument specifies a time.  The format for this argu‐
       ment is described in the DATE SPECIFICATION section later. Entries that
       were  marked  done  (using  the done command) before that epoch will be
       purged.

       Zero or more entry_indices may be given.	 These restrict the purging to
       just  those entries and their descendents.  The default is to purge the
       entire database.

				     --ooOOoo--

       quit

       The quit command is used to exit from tdl when it is used  in  interac‐
       tive mode.  The quit command is not available in the command line mode,
       where it would not make sense.

       The quit command DOES NOT write any pending  updates  to	 the  database
       before  exiting. Compare the exit command, which does write all updates
       made during the current tdl run.

       The main use for the quit command would be to avoid damaging the	 data‐
       base if a serious error had been made.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl remove index_to_remove ...
       tdl delete index_to_remove ...

       Completely  remove  one or more entries from the database.  The indices
       are the same format as those shown in the output of the done command.

       If the string "..." is appended to an index, it means  that  entry  and
       all  its descendents.  This provides a quick way to remove a whole sub-
       tree of tasks.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl report start_time [end_time]

       The report command produces a report (in bulleted list format) of tasks
       completed  in  a	 certain time period.  This is useful if (for example)
       you have to write a weekly summary of the work you've done.

       The default for the end of the time period is the current time, if  the
       end_time argument is not present.  The start of the period to report on
       must always be  specified.   The	 format	 for  the  time	 arguments  is
       described in the DATE SPECIFICATION section later.  Examples :

       tdl report 1w

       will list all tasks completed in the previous week, whereas

       tdl report 2w 1w

       will list all tasks completed between 2 and 1 weeks ago.

       Where a child entry has been completed in the reporting period, but its
       parent has not been completed, the parent text in the  report  will  be
       surrounded by child entries that haven't been completed yet.

				     --ooOOoo--

       revert

       The revert command discards any changes made in the session and reloads
       the in-memory database from disc. If you have used the save command  in
       the  session,  the database will revert to its state at the most recent
       save. Otherwise it will revert to its state when tdl was initially run.

       The revert command does not take any arguments.

				     --ooOOoo--

       save

       The save command can be used to write the  current  in-memory  database
       out to the disc database file. The behaviour is currently equivalent to
       the command exit followed by re-running tdl from the shell.

       This command is useful if you tend to do long interactive tdl sessions.
       It guards against the risks of

       1. accidentally typing quit when you meant exit
       2. machine crashes
       3.  running  tdl in another window and seeing a stale copy of the data‐
       base file.

       The save command does not take any arguments.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl undo index_of_entry_to_undo ...

       This command cancels the effect of the done command  for	 one  or  more
       entries, e.g. after they have been mistakenly marked as done.

       If  the	string	"..." is appended to an index, it means that entry and
       all its descendents.  This provides a quick way to re-open a whole sub-
       tree of tasks.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl usage

       Same as tdl help (q.v.)

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl version

       Show the version number of the software.

				     --ooOOoo--

       tdl which

       Show the filename of the database that tdl accesses in the current con‐
       text.

				     --ooOOoo--

       widen n_level

       The optional n_levels parameter tells tdl how many levels to widen  the
       view.   If the parameter is not specified, it defaults to 1. If you try
       to widen more levels than the depth of the current sub-tree root	 node,
       the widening will be silently limited to its depth.

       This  command  is  only	available when tdl is being run interactively,
       i.e. when you have a tdl prompt. It is not available directly from  the
       shell (where it wouldn't make much sense).

Completion facilities
       When tdl has been compiled to use the readline library, the interactive
       mode supports a number of  completion  functions,  activated  with  the
       <tab> key.

       In particular, the following are supported:

       Command	completion.   If  <tab>	 is  pressed  when the command line is
       empty, a list of possible commands will be shown. If <tab>  is  pressed
       when  a	partial	 command has been typed, the command will be completed
       immediately if possible, otherwise a  list  of  commands	 matching  the
       already-typed prefix will be shown.

       Help  completion.  If help or usage is already in the buffer, a list of
       commands will be shown (as above). The <tab> completion	works  in  the
       same  way  to  complete the name of the command you want a help summary
       for.

       Priority completion.  If list or priority is at the start of the	 input
       buffer  and the current word starts with a letter, tdl will try to com‐
       plete the name of a priority level if <tab> is pressed.

       Open task completion.  If done is at the start  of  the	input  buffer,
       hitting	<tab> will show a list of task indices that are still open. If
       part of an index has already been typed,	 the  open  task  indices  for
       which the typed characters are a prefix will be shown.

       Postpone	 completion.  If postpone is at the start of the input buffer,
       hitting <tab> will show a list of tasks that may	 be  postponed.	 Tasks
       marked  done are excluded. If open is at the start of the input buffer,
       hitting <tab> will show a list of tasks that may be opened.

       Parameter hints.	 If some other command is at the start	of  the	 input
       buffer  and  <tab> is pressed, tdl will show a one-line summary of that
       command's parameters.

DATE SPECIFICATIONS
       The commands add, done, purge, report, take  arguments  defining	 dates
       (with  add and done it is optional).  Dates may be specified in several
       formats, shown by the following examples:

       -1h		   exactly 1 hour ago
       -2d		   exactly 2 days ago
       +1w		   exactly 1 week in the future
       +1m		   exactly 1 month (30 days) in the future
       +2y		   exactly 2 years in the future
       -1d-0815		   08:15am yesterday
       +1d-08		   8am tomorrow
       +1w-08		   8am on the same day as today next week
       +6h-08		   8am on the day containing the time 6 hours ahead of now
       .-08		   8am today
       .-20		   8pm today
       20011020		   absolute : 12 noon on 20th October 2001
       011020		   absolute : 12 noon on 20th October 2001 (current century)
       1020		   absolute : 12 noon on 20th October 2001 (current century and year)
       20		   absolute : 12 noon on 20th October 2001 (current century, year and month)
       20011020-081500	   absolute : 08:15am on 20th October 2001
       20011020-0815	   absolute : 08:15am on 20th October 2001 (seconds=0)
       20011020-08	   absolute : 08:00am on 20th October 2001 (minutes=seconds=0)
       011020-08	   absolute : 08:00am on 20th October 2001 (minutes=seconds=0, current century)

       etc		   (see below)
       -sun		   12 noon on the previous Sunday
       +sat		   12 noon on the following Saturday
       +sat-08		   8am on the following Saturday
       -tue-0815	   08:15am on the previous Tuesday
       etc		   (see below)

       In the 'all-numeric' format, the rule is that  dates  can  have	fields
       omitted from the start (assumed to be the current value), and times can
       have fields omitted from the end (assumed to be	zero,  except  if  the
       hours figure is missing it is assumed to be 12, since most work is done
       in the day.)

       In the 'weekday and time' format, the time rule is  the	same:  missing
       minutes	and seconds are taken as zero and missing hours as 12.	If the
       weekday is the same as today, the  offset  is  always  7	 days  in  the
       required	 direction.  If the weekday is not the same as today, the off‐
       set will always be less than 7 days in the required direction.

       In the 'relative' format, when a time is included as well,  the	proce‐
       dure  is	 as  follows.  First the time is determined which is the given
       number of hours, days etc away from the current time.  Then the	speci‐
       fied  time  on  that  day is used.  The main use for this is to specify
       times like '8am yesterday'.  Obviously some of the more	uses  of  this
       mode are rather far-fetched.

       For  the	 weekday  and relative formats, the sign is actually optional.
       The default sign (implying past (-) or future (+)) will then be assumed
       depending on the command as shown below:

       Command	   Default     Reason
       ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       add	   +	       Add entries with deferred start times
       done	   -	       Entries have been completed at some time in the past
       report	   -	       Reporting on earlier completed tasks not future ones
       purge	   -	       Tasks won't be completed in the future, so no need to purge future ones

HOMEPAGE
       The homepage for tdl on the internet is http://www.rc0.org.uk/tdl/

AUTHOR
       The author is Richard P. Curnow <rc@rc0.org.uk>.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       I  got  the idea from a program called devtodo.	I liked what that pro‐
       gram did and the command line approach to using it, but I ran into lots
       of  compilation	problems with it on older C++ installations.  The path
       of least resistance turned out to be to hack up a C  program  to	 do  a
       similar job.

ENVIRONMENT
       TDL_DATABASE
	      If  this variable is set, it defines the name of the file to use
	      for holding the database of tasks.  If the variable is not  set,
	      the search approach described in the FILES section is used.

       TDL_LIST_MONOCHROME
	      If  this	variable  is  set, the output from the list command is
	      produced in monochrome instead of colour (the default).

FILES
	./.tdldb, ../.tdldb, ../../.tdldb, ...
	      If the TDL_DATABASE environment variable	is  not	 present,  the
	      file  .tdldb  in	the  current  directory	 is  used,  if that is
	      present.	If not, the same file in the parent directory is used,
	      and  so  on,  until  the	root  directory	 of  the filesystem is
	      reached.	If the database is still not found, a new one will  be
	      created  in the current directory (except for options that don't
	      modify the database, such as list, help and version.)

       If you want to have a .tdldb file in  every  directory,	the  suggested
       approach is to set the TDL_DATABASE environment variable to "./.tdldb".
       So in a Bourne-like shell (sh, bash, zsh, ksh etc), you'd write

	      TDL_DATABASE=./.tdldb
	      export TDL_DATABASE

       and in a C-like shell (csh, tcsh etc) you'd write

	      setenv TDL_DATABASE ./.tdldb

       If you want to share .tdldb files between directory hierarchies in some
       non-standard way, the suggested approach is to use symbolic links to do
       this, for example:

	      cd project1
	      ln -s ../project2/.tdldb .

BUGS
       Please report them to the author.

SEE ALSO
       The full documentation for tdl is maintained as a  Texinfo  manual.  If
       the info and tdl programs are properly installed at your site, the com‐
       mand

	      info tdl

       should give you access to the complete manual.

1.4				   May 2003				tdl(1)
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