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What is the most valuable thing that you have pinned to your wall? While XKCD printouts are good, I'm more interested in items that help you do your job better. While this may vary based on your actual position and language of choice, I'm hoping to find general items that people put up. Thanks!

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  • Notes on code
  • Layout diagrams of our production clusters
  • Important numbers that support asks for but that have no meaning to the naked eye (i.e., the really random heck-if-I-know PIN that the help desk asks for every time you're locked out and yes it can be found online but if I could GET online I wouldn't be calling you now would I?)

I think there's a correlation to be made to how decked out your cubicle is and how difficult your job is and/or how hard you work. The programmers that come up with your software and have to solve all the problems in code probably have a couple of toys, a Transformer figure, maybe a humorous desktop picture. The guy whose job it is to sit there and monitor jobs (not even a sysadmin, just the guy who sits there and makes sure programs don't crash) has 50 different things in his area, including Hawaiian leis collecting dust from the trip he took three years ago, a xeroxed picture of the Miami Vice guys with the heads of two coworkers grafted on, ten different things that display which football team he is a fan of, etc. People who have too much non-work-related crap in their cubes have too much time on their hands (which isn't necessarily their fault)

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Dilbert comics from my one-a-day calendar.

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IDE keyboard shortcuts

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TASK - DEADLINE

MODULE - DEADLINE

DEADLINE, DEADLINE, AND DEADLINE. DAMN IT [information technology..lol]

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I have a freeze calendar and my indoor soccer schedule.

(the freeze calendar tells me when I can push changes to production. I need it to give my users promise dates.)

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Pictures of my projects at home to remember why I should just stay at work.

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Family pictures. It's good to remember what's really important.

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Nothing. I've tried putting things up on them before and it seems to generate more distraction than anything else.

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A while back I had all the C string functions and their Unicode and MBCS equivalents. It's really hard to remember _ttoi, _tcslen etc. when there are so many of them.

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A whiteboard.

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As many whiteboards as I can find and any poster from visibone

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Cheat sheets. Right now, I have PHP, HTML, CSS, and MySQL cheat sheets on my cube walls. Depending on the project, I would have the appropriate ones. Great if I get stuck and forget what a certain method is or how I do task X using a technology.

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I follow clean desk policy. I like to keep the walls clean in my cubicle.

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Quotes that I like.

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I tend to put things that keeps me in a positive mood.

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Slackware sticker, the quote "'Proof by analogy' is a fraud.' from Bjarne Stroustrups' "The C++ Programming Language", Pizza Hut and Subway's numbers, and my girlfriend's birthday (which I seem to forget despite having it written there). Also, there's some gibberish I don't remember why I ever wrote there.

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Well, it doesn't help me program, but I usually have an (1'x2') American flag on my cubical wall. (At my office at home, I have a full-size one, 4'x6')

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Database ERDs.

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Post its! that remember me my unfinished task's !

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I have a whiteboard leaning up against the wall of my cube and nothing else. I'm super minimalist at work and at home.

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  • a calendar with pretty pictures :)
  • a logarithmic radio frequency chart from Omega
  • a binary tree of morse code

All of which are ways I change how I think about a problem at hand

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Printed XKCD comics.

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  • Regex cheat sheet
  • List of CLR exception types with what to throw and what to not
  • 14 rules for website performance
  • list of HTML tags
  • jQuery cheat sheet
  • javascript and browser object quick reference.
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I think a better question would have been along the lines of - what programming aids do you have on your cubicle walls.

I would be interested in seeing a discussion of peoples favorite cheat sheets. MS has given out some nice keyboard shortcuts for VB and C# - anyone got links to them? I think i remember discussion on .NET Rocks about some professional poster sized printouts of really slick cheat sheets. That would be awesome!

I often refer to bookmarked pages, like the regex one: RegexLib .NET Cheatsheet

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Isometric

pixelart

posters.

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  • ASCII dec/hex conversion chart ('man ascii' printout)
  • XML Character Entities (photocopied from an O'Reilly book)
  • Office phone system quick guide (how to set up call forwarding etc...)
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I have a whiteboard on the wall. On my computer I have some post-it notes of the "TODO" variety, or with random unmemorable stuff that is needed to know. Very spartan- don't really like it, but it's not "my" space.

At home I accumulate widgets at a disturbing rate. Tux, pictures of girlfriend and family, pencil mugs, coasters, books, bits of computer hardware tacked up, etc. I always feel that the personalization touch makes a work area lived in.

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A picture of some monsters (Domos) chasing a kitten through a grass field... the caption: "Every Time You Comment Your Code, God Kills a Kitten... Please think of the kittens."

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Whiteboards and aviation charts (VFR sectionals)

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I have a whiteboard on one of the walls around me, but what's a cubicle?

;-)

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