Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
What can I use to make a weekly menu and grocery list?
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
What can I use to make a weekly menu and grocery list?
back of an envelope and a pencil stub
"Tamore" wrote in message ... |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
What can I use to make a weekly menu and grocery list?
On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 14:05:31 +1100, "Jezebel"
wrote: back of an envelope and a pencil stub LOL -- I thought that, but I didn't write it. More seriously, the answer depends on how geekish you are. If you usually buy the same things every week, it makes some sense to keep a file on the computer that you can print for each trip. Probably all you need is a simple list written in NotePad, one item per line. Being an übergeek, and because I almost always shop in the same supermarket, I made a list in a Word document. It's one page containing a table, 4 columns by about 45 rows, with the items listed by which store aisle they're in. Each item has a short underline where I can write the quantity to buy on the current trip. You could make a similar list in Excel, or even in Access or FoxPro. Or you could use a pencil... -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
What can I use to make a weekly menu and grocery list?
On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 11:26:15 -0500, Jay Freedman wrote:
If you usually buy the same things every week, it makes some sense to keep a file on the computer that you can print for each trip. Probably all you need is a simple list written in NotePad, one item per line. Being an übergeek, and because I almost always shop in the same supermarket, I made a list in a Word document. It's one page containing a table, 4 columns by about 45 rows, with the items listed by which store aisle they're in. Each item has a short underline where I can write the quantity to buy on the current trip. That's nothing, even an undergeek can do that. A real übergeek would have the list integrated with his menu program. It would automatically decide what he should be eating, look up the ingredients, compare it to the stock-on-hand database, and send an online order to the grocery store. A real übergeek would also be re-programming his Roomba and his Sony dog-robot to cooperate to get the food out of the refrigerator, cook it, and bring it to the table. It would determine when to start cooking by tracking your location using your cell phone GPS so it would know when you had left work. Bob S |