This may not suit your needs so feel free to disregard because it's not a direct answer to your request but it's more of general advice for note taking and task management in a system that I've developed which works well for me. Here goes...
I try to divide my tasks between three categories:
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Simple to-dos
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Complex & interdependent tasks
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Projects
Simple to-dos are easy. That's the sort of things that you put on a shopping list or a list of places you need to visit while you're out shopping or the things you're going to clean today. The stuff that isn't complex and can be written on a scrap of paper or a note in your phone that you don't need a record of. These are the lists that are disposable. How you choose to manage this stuff is really a matter of personal preference and what you've got at hand.
For complex and interdependent tasks, I like to use bullet points and indentations for each dependency. It's easier to just show you than to try and describe it in words because when you see it, it should make intuitive sense:
_• Clean house for inspection
_ • Organise lawns to be mowed
_ • See if neighbour will lend mower
_ • Get quote from lawnmowing company
_ • Get price for electric line trimmer
_ • Deep clean kitchen
_ • Soak range hood filters
_ • Scrub grout & polish tiles
_ • Buy grout brush
_ • Clean oven door
That sort of thing. Different bullet point symbols per indentation makes it easier to deal with at a glance.
The reason this works well is because it allows me to empty my head of tasks and I'm not trying to remember half a dozen dependent tasks which are part of the larger task, and I can arrange things by order of priority or necessity which is especially good when I realise that it's necessary to do one step before I do others for whatever reason.
Last of all is projects.
Projects are tasks which require a lot of information, a lot of decisions, and often require that things be done sequentially. Think of these as generally being one-off tasks that are large or which have a lot of moving parts, especially ones that you're unfamiliar with; you probably know how to clean your kitchen so that's not a project. Replacing your kitchen cabinets takes a lot of steps and a lot of information, plus you'll have to make a lot of decisions in the process, so this would almost certainly be a project unless it's also your day job.
I like to use Notion for projects because it helps me collect info and gives me access to previous decisions made etc. but there are other similar apps out there. For people who work in the health sector and similar fields, I basically casenote my previous actions and what the next steps are.
Each project gets its own document/folder and I either dump all of my thoughts, prices, measurements, research, delivery times, next steps in the process, other people who need to be involved, etc. into one single document or if it's a really big project then I will create separate files or documents within the project folder which will be titled as relevant sections in a way that makes sense to me - it might be simple and have one Steps/Tasks document and another for Thoughts or it might be really big and have a document category for each domain, however this is sorta on the level that I've only ever really gone to when I've done event management or actual professional project management so it's not likely to be necessary for people unless they really need a high level of granular detail to provide needed structure or a sense of security.
My last tip is to use a calendar for time-blocking tasks which have a specific date that they're due by.
This helps me manage my time because it provides a suggestion for what needs to happen on the day that something is due and I can block out that period of time to get the task done. It doesn't matter if it's rough or only used as a guideline because the reminder is the important part to me. This is an optional thing but I find it's a good adjunct/middle ground for the simple to-do list tasks. Obviously for time-sensitive tasks and projects, I put them into my calendar so I get pop-up reminders too. This helps me organise my time better because when I open my calendar, I am looking at my days ahead and what I need to get done - basically I'm in time-management mode. Relying on reminders from within Notion or similar is... okay but the app dictates to me when it's going to remind me of due dates and I find that doesn't really help me with time management because it's not on hand when I need it.
My final advice is to create a system of organisation that works for you. Build it from the ground up. When you find you have outgrown your to-do list and you require extra functions, e.g. reminders, then seek out either a better app/system or add an additional layer of organisation, e.g. time-blocking in your calendar app. Let the system fail and identify how and why the system failed you then use this information to help you develop and refine your system. The absolute best system is the one that works for you and which is most intuitive for you. If you are working to accommodate the system then that's a major red flag imo because your system should be an extension of your brain and a way to structure your processes rather than trying to squeeze your needs and your processes into a system which doesn't accommodate you. If you have to put in significant effort to make your system work, especially if it's after the initial phase of familiarising yourself with it, then that's a bad sign.