Handyshopper Palm
Comprehensive tracking of Virginia EMS Continuing Education credits. Supports all Virginia-recognized EMS certification levels. Allows you to track credits.
I recently converted from the PalmOS world, and have yet to see a shopping app for the iPhone that can come close to the features of HandyShopper. Mainly what I need is. multiple stores which carry each item.
a different aisle and price for each item and each store. ability to sort the list by aisle, price, etc Anyone know of anything that will do this? I've looked at everything in the app store and in the web apps and none of them list these features (although I haven't downloaded them all). It doesn't have to be a native iPhone app, a web app or even a regular web site would be fine. Last edited by mcdan333; at 11:51 AM. This is written a good year after the original post, but I think I've found a viable alternative to HandyShopper.
Try GroceryGadget. Per-store prices and stores, automatic sorting by store order (also alpha, category or manual sort), a field for notes, a place for coupons/sales prices, customizable categories and online interface for data input and sharing. It also has the capacity for completely separate lists, which might be usable like HS's separate databases. I used those for Christmas lists, 'take with on a road trip' lists, task lists etc. I have not yet tested for the usability of this function, but it looks like it could work. There is also a lite version with a limit of 20 items and 1 store IIRC.
That's sufficient for testing with no investment. Synopsys design compiler interview questions. The way it works is different, and it took me a while to feel comfortable with it, but I'm pleased. I was a HS user for many years, and thought I'd have to leave it behind, but this is close.
Absolutely no affiliation, just an old HS fan who's been searching for a year for a viable replacement. I also miss HandyShopper terribly! I used that app for everything under the SUN! (And I refuse to support SplashShopper in any way what-so-ever.) I don't need anything near as fancy as HandyShopper was (aisle order, prices at multiple stores, etc.) but I do need prices so I can estimate a running total. Since all I want is an estimate, I don't care if something if $0.50 cheaper at another store.
For me, it's not worth the gas/time to go to more than one store. I only price compare when I happen to be at another store, which is rare. I'm using Grocery Gadget, but don't have a place to put in prices.?
Maybe there is a free/pay version and I didn't buy that feature? I have ezShopListLite and plan to try it, next. I don't care that this is an old thread.
Handy Shopper Palm Os
I'm just glad it's here!
HandyShopper works on any Pocket PC device that uses Windows Mobileā¢ 2003 or higher, and on any device that uses Palm OS 2.0 through OS 5.x. If you want to know whether HandyShopper runs on a specific device, ask in the User Group. HandyShopper is a tool for managing your shopping lists. It helps you build a shopping database that remembers everything you've purchased before, so that you can find them in your 'All' list (master list) and mark them as needed so they appear in your 'Need' list. When you go shopping, you check off items from your list as you put them in your cart, then after you pay for them you use the 'Checkout' command to move the checked-off items back to the 'All' list (items that aren't checked off yet stay in the 'Need' list).
Even though HandyShopper is designed for shopping lists, you can use it for other kinds of lists, too. Here are a few of the many features of HandyShopper: Create as many databases as you wish (shopping lists or other lists). Mark items in your database (list) as Needed, and once you finish shopping, the items are remembered so you can quickly reuse them later. You can keep track of how many of each item you need, what the price is, the aisle where the item is located, whether the item is taxable, and more. Tap an item and hold the stylus down for half a second to pop up a context menu with some common actions. A special one-handed mode lets you mark off items with one hand, without having to pull out the stylus.
The Total command adds up the total amount for the items you have marked as Needed, and the total amount of the items you've put in your cart. Notes can be attached to items. Each database can be sorted by any of the fields (up to 3 fields at a time). Keep track of up to 100 stores per database, and which items are available at which stores.
Stores that have needed items show up in bold in the Stores dropdown list. Organize items in up to 100 categories per database.
The column widths in the list view can be resized by dragging the column header divider bars. Optionally keep track of prices and aisles for an item on a per-store basis. Copy an item to another database, including which stores the item is available.