Another way to use this: As you are cooking a recipe and you use up a staple ingredient (like flour or sugar), you simply uncheck the box next to it so that it populates into your shopping list for the next time you go to the store.

For instance, I have a set of Thanksgiving recipes. Near the end of my Cookbook file, I used this Dataview snippet to create a small list with ONLY those Thanksgiving recipes for easy reference come November.


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It took a few days for the app & fridge to finally sync after this latest update. I wish they kept the feature to send checked off items from your shopping list to the View Inside/Food List. You can send items from Food List to shopping list, so why not the other way as well?

A shopping_list_updated event is triggered when items in the list are modified, with the following data payload attached to it. This can be used to trigger automations such as sending a push notification when someone adds an item to the shopping list, which when clicked, will open the list.

Kickoff is around the corner, and we are so excited! We previously shared some information on the KitBot but to help ensure that teams have the materials on hand to make the KitBot, we wanted to release a shopping list of some items to buy.

Will a complete BOM that includes all items needed to build the kit robot be released on (or even before) kickoff? Our robotics program would like to build multiple kit robots and would like to make sure we purchase enough of the components that aren't listed (presumably things that come in the other totes).

Thank you for the question. We listed 0.118" as it is the easiest size to find at most stores. Some places list it as 0.125" but with the tolerance specs they have most pieces are actually 0.118". Regardless, it is okay to use 0.125" if that is what you have on hand. Good Luck!

The prompt is expecting me to ask a question, but I really came here to help anyone who, like me, is STILL (in January, 2020) looking for an answer for how to use Siri on your Apple Watch to add items to a shopping list...as everyone else on this post already knows, it worked at one point, but then it stopped, and Apple still hasn't fixed it. (Some postulate that once you put your watch on 'Theater Mode', it triggers this glitch...I only know that's about the time my shopping list glitch happened, though can't say with certainty that's what caused the problem.) Anyway, I did figure out a way around it: If you tell Siri on your watch "Add apples to list" she says something like (I'm paraphrasing here) "I don't have a list. Would you like to create one?" You say "Yes." She creates a new list. Now go into your Reminders on your PHONE. You probably have at least three: "Reminders", "Shopping List", and "Tasks". Find the NEW list that has the "Apples" you just added. THAT is your NEW shopping list. Click the circle with the 3 dots at the top right, select "Name & Appearance", and change the name to "Shopping List". Now go back to your Lists (you may now have TWO "Shopping Lists"). DELETE the OLD shopping list, the one you couldn't add to using your Apple Watch. NOW you should be able to tell Siri (on your watch) "Add bananas to Shopping List" and check the Shopping List on your phone. Hopefully, your NEW shopping list shows Apples and Bananas.

Thanks for your comment, much appreciated. I think I understand the basics of using my Apple watch with Siri. My issue was that one day I could tell Siri to 'add apples to shopping list' and then that feature just stopped working. I don't know why, but I do know that by using Siri to create a NEW shopping list, and then deleting the OLD shopping list, the command now works fine. I posted that 'fix' because a lot of other people had been commenting (over several years) about having the same issue. Some thought it was tied to using the 'Theater Mode' setting; after they had turned that on at some point, the shopping list feature just quit. I don't know if it was related or not. But my 'fix' definitely 'fixed' my problem.

What you need to do is iterate over all the items in the collection and bind each of them to the delete event handler OR you can handle the event at a higher level and then determine which element triggered the event and act accordingly. That approach is called "event delegation" and results in less code (no looping over the collection and registering event handlers to each item) and better performance (instead of many event registrations, there is just one). Additionally, this approach is preferred when new elements that should have event bindings are added dynamically to the document as you are doing here with the creation of new shopping list items because those new items do not have to be set up with explicit event handlers.

Do you head to the grocery store and feel overwhelmed with all of the options? Well, I've created FIVE downloadable and printable grocery lists from five different and popular grocery stores. All of my absolute must haves from Whole Foods, Target, a regular grocer, Trader Joe's, and Costco!

But the very best part of Plan to Eat is the automated shopping list. When you add recipes to your calendar, the shopping list will automatically populate an organized list of ingredients you need to buy.

To create a shopping list for meals, select the dates you want to shop for and whether you want to shop based on full recipes or for a specific number of people. Carb Manager calculates the amount of food that you should buy, organizes the list based on the type of food, and identifies the foods that are in each recipe. You can change the items in the shopping list as needed, and mark items off the list while you shop.

The shopping list is an internal order management tool to help you follow up on requests/needs from team members, compare/assign them to budgets, as well as putting a permission based approval system in process.

If you would like to save the state on a server of yours, openHAB (and also Home Assistant) are not made for this Job. Managing and syncing a list has nothing to do with the automation or control of smart home devices. There is a reddit thread over at r/selfhosted: _keep_selfhosted_for_shopping_lists/ They discussed self-hosted, todo-list/shopping-list-like apps for running yourself.

I am presenting two lists. The first is the shopping list of what I would put together if I was asked to gather the most effective cage set-up items. It contains a high end cage with comprehensive features. And I will be using each and every one of these feature to make an effective home for my chameleon.

This is the shopping list which has the items that are my choice. The main component to this build is the Dragon Strand Tall Hybrid Cage System which is a full featured cage system with Dragon Ledge branch anchors, a fitted drainage tray, and two hydration mounts for mist nozzles.

This shopping list provides a blueprint for one possible cage set-up out of many. Chameleon keepers across the community have come up with an amazing number of variations that work. By learning the principles behind why these components were chosen you can make your own combinations that work. ff782bc1db

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