(Apologies for the caveman-Internet quoting.)
> I know that in Omnifocus there is a layer above projects called
> Folders. Are you saying that you have a folder for "Being a Girl"?
No; I don't feel that OmniFocus supports Areas of Focus at all. When I allowed a larger number of projects in OmniFocus, my sorting was fairly whimsical, but it was more by type of activity--Hobbies, and then below that Sewing and Gardening, that sort of thing. Or on the work side (not in OmniFocus but the discussion still applies), Programming, and below that a folder for each project, as my management would define a project.
Now I allow far fewer projects, so there's not much need for sorting.
> If that is the case, I think, if I were you, I would much rather
> either get an app that has visible overlapping tags
Yep; if I could wave a magic wand, I would force Omnifocus to offer two-field tags, where each tag would support a Tag Type, and a Tag Value. But it's not a strong enough need to tempt me, yet, to switch to another app.
> But to make an AoR Folder for such goals has the major disadvantage
> that all your Programmer tasks will be split up between different
> folders,
Right--I wouldn't do that. If I introduce a structured AoF element to my system--and I don't really have one now--it will be outside my everyday lists and tasks and it certainly won't structure them. That (organizing my projects) is not what AoFs would be for, for me.
I might make a list of AoFs and put my projects under items in the list, to help me see if I'm addressing each AoF. I might spend a few minutes journaling about each one. I might have a "thoughts" list for each one that I review at some interval, probably a longer interval than the weekly review. I'm not sure. But I wouldn't use AoFs to organize my work, and therefore I don't need AoFs to be of a nature that would be useful for organizing my work.
> I know that in Omnifocus there is a layer above projects called
> Folders. Are you saying that you have a folder for "Being a Girl"?
No; I don't feel that OmniFocus supports Areas of Focus at all. When I allowed a larger number of projects in OmniFocus, my sorting was fairly whimsical, but it was more by type of activity--Hobbies, and then below that Sewing and Gardening, that sort of thing. Or on the work side (not in OmniFocus but the discussion still applies), Programming, and below that a folder for each project, as my management would define a project.
Now I allow far fewer projects, so there's not much need for sorting.
> If that is the case, I think, if I were you, I would much rather
> either get an app that has visible overlapping tags
Yep; if I could wave a magic wand, I would force Omnifocus to offer two-field tags, where each tag would support a Tag Type, and a Tag Value. But it's not a strong enough need to tempt me, yet, to switch to another app.
> But to make an AoR Folder for such goals has the major disadvantage
> that all your Programmer tasks will be split up between different
> folders,
Right--I wouldn't do that. If I introduce a structured AoF element to my system--and I don't really have one now--it will be outside my everyday lists and tasks and it certainly won't structure them. That (organizing my projects) is not what AoFs would be for, for me.
I might make a list of AoFs and put my projects under items in the list, to help me see if I'm addressing each AoF. I might spend a few minutes journaling about each one. I might have a "thoughts" list for each one that I review at some interval, probably a longer interval than the weekly review. I'm not sure. But I wouldn't use AoFs to organize my work, and therefore I don't need AoFs to be of a nature that would be useful for organizing my work.