The basics
Every date with something specific on (a concert, a festival night, a booked event) shows a set of round buttons — pick one per evening. That's on purpose: it keeps you from accidentally double-booking a night, so you don't need to think about clashes at all.
Anything marked with a ✅ is already confirmed and booked — there's nothing to choose there, it's just shown so you know the evening's spoken for.
Two ways to browse
Use the List / Calendar toggle near the top:
- List — every day, one after another, so you can scroll through the whole trip in one go. Undated things (exhibitions, restaurants, evening extras) are grouped in their own sections further down.
- Calendar — one day at a time, with a small month grid to jump around. A filled dot means that day already has something picked; an empty dot means it's still open.
Both views are just two windows onto the same picks — anything chosen in one shows up correctly in the other.
Shows that run more than one night
A few things (like a play with a two-night run) are valid on either of two dates. They show up as a normal choice on both nights — but once you pick one night, the other night shows it as "already picked — [date]" instead, so you can't accidentally book it twice.
Exhibitions, restaurants, and other "anytime" things
These don't compete for one of your evening picks — tick as many as you like. In the calendar view, if you tick one while looking at a particular day, it gets tagged to that day; every other day will then show it as already picked, so you always know when you've actually planned to do it.
If you tick one from the list view instead, it's just marked as "want to do this" without a specific date yet — that's fine, it'll show up in your shortlist as unscheduled.
The ⓘ icon
Tap it to open more information (official page, tickets, menu, etc.) in a new tab. It's deliberately separate from the tick/radio button next to it, so opening a link never accidentally selects or deselects anything.
Your shortlist
Everything picked so far is collected at the bottom of the page, in date order, so you can see the whole plan taking shape at a glance.
Sharing
Everything saves automatically as you tap — no submit button needed. Anyone with the link sees the same shared picks, so you and Roberto can both browse and tick things whenever suits, from any device.