# Today Okay it's 2022 and you still don't want to run nepomunk, a holistic semantic filesystem approach never happened and you're stuck with a million files in your Download folder, home folder etc. So I use this script to give me a nice work environment, based on each day. Every time you open bash, it'll drop you into today's directory. When I think about stuff it's like.. oh yeah I worked on that last week, last year, etc - the folder structure makes this a lot easier, and you can just write 'notes' or 'meeting-with-joe' and you know the ref date. For your bashrc: ``` alias t='source /path/to/today' t ``` Now every day you'll know what you worked on yesterday! ``` # this is where you'll get dropped by default. calvin@bison:~/work/2022/07/10$ calvin@bison:~/work/2022/07/10$ ls WardsPerlSimulator.pl calvin@bison:~/work/2022/07/10$ cd ..; ls; 01 02 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 calvin@bison:~/work/2022/07$ cd ..; ls 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 calvin@bison:~/work/2022$ cd ..; ls 2021 2022 ``` additionally you'll get a shortcut, you can type 't' as a bash fn, or go to ~/t/ which is symlinked and updated everytime you run today (which is everytime you open bash or hit 't'. this is useful if you want to have Firefox/Slack/whatever always save something in your 'today' folder.