Tools : Plan in SuperMemo 2000 opens a schedule manager that should help you stick with optimum proportions of time devoted to individual activities in a selected period of time.
Schedule manager can help you find optimum proportions between learning activities in your learning slot. For example, your 2 hours learning time in the evening could look like this:
- 30 min - surfing the net (searching for interesting articles)
- 30 min - reviewing articles, quick reading, importing the most valuable articles to SuperMemo
- 30 min - reading in SuperMemo, introducing new articles to the learning process, topic repetitions, extracting new topics, generating cloze deletions
- 30 min - repetitions in SuperMemo
Schedule manager can also be used to plan your whole day. It works best for people who are not limited by meetings, deadlines, and can freely plan their day. It is less useful for people whose days change at a minute's notice or are not composed of regularly repeating activities.
Probably, future society will strongly drift towards deadline-free, creative work that will excellently fit dynamic scheduling currently used in SuperMemo.
The main purpose of schedule manager in SuperMemo is to keep optimum proportions of time devoted to particular activities in your schedule (e.g. 1 hour for e-mail, 1 hour for surfing, 2 hours for learning, 1 hour for sports, 3 hours for family, 5 hours for work, etc.).
This text tells you briefly how to optimize your learning time or your entire day with Tools : Plan in SuperMemo
Creating a new schedule
- Choose Tools : Plan or press Ctrl+P
- Click on the hours field at the top and type in the length of your schedule in hours (e.g. type 16.1 if you want your waking day to last 16.1 hours)
- Click on the Activity field in the first row (the one which starts at 0:00) and type in your first activity of the day, e.g. Washing and breakfast
- Press Enter to move to the Length column
- Type the length of time in minutes you would like to spend on your first activity (e.g. 40 minutes for Washing and breakfast)
- Press Enter to move to the second row (second activity). Ignore all other fields. At this point they are mostly meaningless!
- Type in the second activity and the time you would like to devote to it (e.g. Learning with SuperMemo, 100 minutes)
- Press Enter again to create the third activity, type its name and time
- Keep on typing in your activities until your schedule is complete. Do not look at the sum of times of the activities. Always use the length of time you would want to spend on an activity; even if it is not very realistic
- See the picture below for an exemplary whole-day schedule
- Type the start time of your schedule template or leave it as 0:00 if you often change the start time. The schedule in the picture will begin at 6 am.
- If some activities must start at a specific hour, click the Start field of these activities and type in the start time (fixed time will be marked as a plus sign on the left in the gray column). The exemplary schedule, apart from the start time, keeps only the hours devoted for Work fixed; the rest is composed of floating activities that are optimized by SuperMemo
- You can now inspect other fields of your schedule. ActLen will tell you how much SuperMemo can actually allocate for a given activity. This will often be less than Length. After all, we nearly always have greater plans than we can squeeze into 24 hours (I wish there were two of me!). In the picture below, Learning with SuperMemo begins at 6:30. The plan length of this activity is 120 but there isn't enough time before Work. SuperMemo must then reduce the time for this slot down to 90 minutes. If fixed activities squeeze other activities too much, you can reshuffle activities by dragging them (grab the activity by the gray field on the left)
- OptLen indicates how much SuperMemo could allocate for an activity if there were no fixed-time activities. For example, SuperMemo could allocate the requested 120 minutes for Learning with SuperMemo if there were not fixed-time Work slot at 8 am
- Opt Start indicates the optimum start hour for an activity if there were no fixed-time activities (OptStart[n-1]+OptLen[n-1]=OptStart[n]). If Learning with SuperMemo indeed lasted the optimum 120 minutes, the optimum start for Work would be 8:35 (instead of the fixed 8:00)
- Delay indicates the delay in minutes of the actual activity start (the Start column) as compared with the optimum start (OptStart)(Delay=Start-OptStart)[min.]. For example, Work begins 35 minutes ahead of the optimum time. On the other hand, Lunch is 2.8 minutes late compared with the optimum. The delay of other slots is proportionally reduced down to zero as the schedule progresses towards Shower
- The percent column tells you what proportion of time has been used for a given activity as compared with the optimum time. In a schedule without fixed activities, this column always shows 100% for all activities. Due to the fixed-time Work slot; however, morning activities are squeezed to 77% of their optimum value. At the same time, evening activities have some more slack and get 101% (i.e. 1% more time as compared with the optimum schedule without fixed-time activities)
Using the schedule template on a given day
Your schedule template defines your optimum at which you should strive. However, in real life you will never reach this optimum. This is why you will always need to start a day with the schedule template and modify the schedule in real-time.
- At the beginning of your working day, use Tools : Plan to start the schedule manager in SuperMemo
- Choose the schedule template in the combo box in the top-left corner of the schedule manager (on the first day, you will probably only have one schedule listed there: your original schedule template created above). You can use Ctrl+Alt+T to select the schedule using the keyboard
- Choose Menu : Save as in the schedule manager (the menu button is listed on the toolbar)
- SuperMemo, by default, will name your today's schedule by using today's date (e.g. "Oct 09, 2000, Mon.txt"; note that each schedule is a simple text file that can be inspected in Windows Notepad)
- If the present time differs from Start time for the first activity, click on the first activity and click the button Set (the one with the clock icon). Set puts the current time in the Start field of the selected activity
- See the ActLen field of the first activity. Set up your timer (if any). Use the activity length from ActLen field and subtract a few minutes (this practise prevents constant delays in the schedule). Alternatively, inspect the Start field of the next activity and use it to set up your alarm clock (if any). If, for any reasons, you will have to complete the activity faster or it will be somehow interrupted, set the alarm at earlier time or do not set it at all. If the activity is very important for your today's schedule and you would rather increase time spent on this, set up the alarm at a slightly later hour than the beginning of the next activity
- Once you complete your first activity, click on the second row and click Set again. This will update the start time of the second activity and the actual length (ActLen), delay (Delay) and other fields of the first activity
- Set the alarm clock or timer to the beginning of the next activity
- Upon alarm, click Set on the next activity and execute it. Repeat these steps until you reach the end of your schedule or until it is forcefully terminated (e.g. by other obligations or by the time you should go to sleep)
- At the end of the schedule, select the last executed activity and choose Menu : Terminate. Check Use current time for termination. Your schedule is complete.
- On the next day, go back to Step 1
This is how the schedule could have looked upon execution (as exported with Export on the schedule manager toolbar):
Oct 09, 2000, Mon (16.5 h)
- 06:00 - Washing and breakfast (23 min, 57%)
- 06:23 - Learning with SuperMemo (New trends in design) (101 min, 84%)
- 08:04 - Work (last days of The Style Suite project) (438 min, 110%)
- 15:22 - Lunch (71 min, 177%)
- 16:33 - Rest and newspapers (109 min, 363%)
- 18:22 - Time with the kids (58 min, 48%)
- 19:20 - House tasklist (fixing the sink) (32 min, 79%)
- 19:52 - Supper (20 min, 68%)
- 20:12 - Surfing the net (presidential debate) (113 min, 94%)
- 22:05 - E-mail (high-school reunion notification) (9 min, 29%)
- 22:14 - Shower (16 min, 81%)
- 22:30 . Sleep (end)
The above file can be provided with comments (e.g. fixing the sink) and is directly importable to your daily diary providing a daily record of your performance. Note than none of the activities lasted as long as planned (100%). The figures in the parentheses indicate the actual lenght (ActLen field) and the percentage of time devoted to the activity as compared with the optimum. Note also that the total time was increased to 16.5 hours on this particular day.
Schedule analysis
You will often notice that your schedule requires fine-tuning. You may always want to reduce the time for breakfast and increase the time for sports or education; however, your plans may be unrealistic and you will find yourself doing an average of 48 minutes for washing and breakfast as opposed to the planned 40 minutes. To prevent this from happening, you should use the button Delays to honestly analyze your schedule and realistically adjust the length of activities that you never manage to complete in time or which never get enough time as compared with the plan. The delay analysis of the schedule presented in the previous paragraph would produce the following outcome:
Delays: Oct 09, 2000, Mon (16.5 h)
- 363%: Rest and newspapers (30->109 min.)
- 177%: Lunch (40->71 min.)
- 110%: Work (last days of The Style Suite project) (400->438 min.)
- 94%: Surfing the net (presidential debate) (120->113 min.)
- 84%: Learning with SuperMemo (New trends in design) (120->101 min.)
- 80%: House tasklist (fixing the sink) (40->32 min.)
- 80%: Shower (20->16 min.)
- 67%: Supper (30->20 min.)
- 57%: Washing and breakfast (40->23 min.)
- 48%: Time with the kids (120->58 min.)
- 30%: E-mail (high-school reunion notification) (30->9 min.)
(exported: Monday, October 09, 2000, 10:31:46 PM)
It is easy to notice that Rest and newspapers
was the greatest schedule offender. You have devoted 109 minutes instead of the
optimum 30 minutes, which stands for the 363% overshot. Your
lunch also lasted 71 minutes instead of just 30. In conclusion you may decide to
either improve your discipline or increase the desired length of time devoted to
lunch and the postprandial rest.
On the other end of the spectrum is your e-mail slot which was cut from 30
minutes to just 9 minutes (probably as a result of being late). In other words,
you devoted only 30% of the planned time to e-mail. If e-mail is important, you
might increase the length of the e-mail slot, which would make it less
vulnerable to delay. Move the e-mail slot to an earlier hour (e.g. before
surfing the net) or reduce the length of activities preceding the e-mail slot.
Best of all, you should by all means avoid delays which call the whole idea of
schedule manager in question. You have to realistically adjust the lengths of
activities and strive and completing individual slots ahead of time. This will
prevent end-of-schedule activities from being a constant casualty of delays.
Once your schedule stabilizes and you can efficiently stick to its timing, you can use the button Adjust on the toolbar that will copy OptLen fields to Length fields. This will help you adjust realistic length figure upon schedule analysis (usually, your first plans will by far exceed your abilities; hence the value of Adjust).
Schedule exceptions and emergencies
The following circumstances may call for special action in the schedule manager:
- Adding an activity - during the execution of your schedule, you might figure out that you need to insert an additional activity (e.g. an unexpected family visit). For that purpose, go to the activity that is closest to the expected time of the additional event and press Ins (or choose Menu : Insert). Type in the length of this activity or type in the expected start time and end time. All activities before and after the inserted activity will optimally be compressed (with the assumption that no activity will be split). If compression is disproportionate on one side of the inserted activity, move some floating activities away from the overcrowded part
- Removing an activity - if you want to skip an activity due to delays or due to its lower priority, you can delete it with Del. For the sake of schedule analysis with Delays, you would better use Menu : Skip at the moment you arrive to the activity that should be deleted. Skipped activities will still show in the delays analysis as 0% executed. This is valuable material for drawing conclusions as to whether the activity should be removed, shortened or moved to a later hour (and be more subject to potential delays)
- Moving an activity - if you need to change the sequence of floating activities, you can drag one ahead of another (e.g. you may drag e-mail ahead of web surfing if you expect your colleague to send you an important URL you plan to explore). To drag an activity, press the left mouse button down on the gray column on the left and drag the activity up or down
Other options
- Save - save the currently edited schedule on the disk
- Fix - fix the selected activity at its current start time (SuperMemo will not change the start time)
- Export - export the schedule as HTML (e.g. to keep a daily record of schedule execution)
- Reset - rest the schedule, i.e. set all Length fields to the optimum possible length, unfix start times and adjust start times to the optimum listed in the OptStart column
- Open - open another schedule
- New - start editing a new schedule template
- Save as - save a schedule template on a given day before schedule execution
- Terminate - terminate the schedule at a given activity and skip or delete the succeeding activities
- Skip - skip the activity (i.e. fix its start time and set the fixed start time of the next activity at the same time)
FAQ
SuperMemo Plan is not of much use beyond SuperMemo (#6190)
(zm, Tuesday, August 28, 2001 10:14 PM)
Question:
I would like to see better integration of
Tools : Plan with MS Outlook. For example, export plan and import it in MS Outlook
Answer:
The main idea behind
Tools : Plan is to perfectly adjust proportions of time allocated to
individual activities during a day or during a learning time block. Those proportions are continually adjusted
as you proceed with the execution, and such a plan is of little use beyond SuperMemo. If you only need a record of your daily activity, you can use the
Export option among plan manager buttons
Q: What is the meaning of the Delay field
in Tools : Plan?
A: Delay on the activity in minutes (see: Using
Tools : Plan)
Q: Why can I not edit the Delay field?
A: Delay is computed automatically by SuperMemo
and depends on the start time of a given activity as compared with the optimum
time
Q: What is the interpretation of colors in the plan?
A: Gray indicates areas that cannot be edited. Yellow distinguishes the
start time. Green indicates zero-length activities (e.g. terminating activity or
skipped activities). Dark selector indicates the currently edited cell (press
enter to start editing or just start typing). Orange distinguishes the activity
that corresponds with the current time (as indicated by your computer)