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I've just bought a new 4GB USB thumb drive and I'm trying to decide what to put on it. I'm thinking about one of the webserver on a stick packages, a C/C++ IDE (leaning toward Code::Blocks; had Dev-C++ on my old USB drive) and Python.

What development related tools do you carry around with you on yours?

Update

I've added categories.

IDEs

Code::Blocks Open source, cross platform C/C++ IDE

  • Supports several compilers (that you must supply) but you can also download a version that includes MingW.
  • (There's a FAQ question on their website explaining how to make it portable)

Codelite -- Open-source, cross platform C/C++ IDE
Eclipse -- Open-source, cross platform Java IDE
NetBeans -- Open-source, cross platform Java IDE
JCreator -- Java IDE
MSVC6 -- Microsoft's pre-.NET C/C++ environment

Languages & Compilers

Portable Python -- Interpreter for the Python programming language

  • Includes SciTE (editor) and Django (web framework)

Strawberry Perl -- "A 100% Open Source CPAN-capable Perl for Windows® computer that works exactly the same as Perl everywhere else."
Py3k -- Newest version of the Python programming language
Stackless Python
Lua -- Scripting language
MinGW -- Sort of a Windows port of GCC

  • "MinGW provides a complete Open Source programming tool set which is suitable for the development of native Windows programs that do not depend on any 3rd-party C runtime DLLs."

Editors

Notepad++ (after so many recommendations, I had to try it)
UltraEdit -- "text, hex, HTML, PHP, Java, Javascript, Perl, and programmer's editor."
VIM -- "highly configurable text editor built to enable efficient text editing"

  • Major rival to emacs

HEdit -- Hex editor
XVI32 (Hex Editor)
e text editor -- "The Power of Textmate on Windows"
Intype text editor -- Code editor for Windows
ConTEXT -- Code and text editor
Editpad Pro -- "powerful and versatile text editor or word processor."

Discovery

Dependency Walker -- Allows you to see what DLLs a program or DLL depends on and what functions they export.

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5  
Please mark as Community Wiki – Jay Bazuzi Jan 5 at 18:15
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I just bought a 32GB thumb drive, and I see at least 64GB is available. Dare I suggest Visual Studio and MSDN online documentation? ;) – Arjan Einbu May 7 at 12:57
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Bring your Linux OS with you =D – Nuno Furtado May 7 at 13:13
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55 Answers

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Assuming a Windows Machine:

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vote up 17 vote down

Sysinternals tools

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vote up 14 vote down

I like PortableApps. I use NotePad++, OpenOffice applications, etc.

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I use a 16GB USB-Stick (larger volumes are available) as a Linux-system, that contains my complete work-environment. Every computer I use boot from this drive into my system.

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May I know which distribution do you use ? – Sake May 7 at 13:28
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Ubuntu 9.04. This detects the correct screen-resolution on different machines. – Mnementh May 7 at 14:45
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vote up 10 vote down

For Windows, many of the sysinternal tools.

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vote up 8 vote down

The Portable Apps website has a load of applications that may be useful, such as WinMerge, Notepad++ and Gimp.

If you do a lot of web development that I believe thatAptana will fit on a thumb drive.

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vote up 5 vote down

I have a lot on one of my keys, mostly asm related.

I also have

And some other stuff that I can't remember as I don't have it on me :'(

I also have a usb key with backtrack3 on it and one with a windows image that I can use to install it on my netbook really quickly. I think this is a good guide on doing that.

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  1. Firefox
  2. Notepad++
  3. Python
  4. Some music (it calms me between coding jobs!)
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Ubuntu Linux

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+1 - if you want to carry development tools with you, why not an entire development environment? I have Kubuntu installed on an 8G thumb drive, and it's sufficiently performant for the environments where I find myself booting it up – kdgregory Jan 5 at 18:32
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It's handy to have http://unxutils.sourceforge.net/ (grep/cut/sh etc...) You may need some environment better then cmd to run it. Try FAR - http://www.farmanager.com/index.php?l=en (use open source one).

Denver is all in one web server package (also with usb-flash install support): http://translate.google.com/translate?hl=uk&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.denwer.ru%2F&sl=ru&tl=en&history_state0=

But it is for russian audience.

Also: http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/portable-software-usb/

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vote up 3 vote down

PortableApps.com has most of what's on my portable USB drive:

  • Filezilla
  • Firefox
  • Notepad++
  • PuTTY
  • Wireshark

Besides those, I also have Beyond Compare on my USB drive.

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Note: I am a Windows developer. This colours what you read below.

  • Dependency Walker (Depends.exe)
  • WinZip
  • Notepad++ (v5)
  • DbWin32
  • Process Explorer
  • HEdit - a hex editor
  • WinDiff
  • Ripper - an app I co-wrote for stripping redundant lines from log files.
  • DelSub - an app I wrote for deleting files with given extensions in a folder tree. Handy for removing NCBs and PCHs etc. before backup.
  • DosHere - an explorer extension for adding a "command prompt here" entry to the context menu for any folder. This is the FIRST THING I put on any windows box I have to use.
  • DeTab - an app I wrote for stripping tabs out of source files. Note to self - need to update this for Unicode.

Note the emphasis on debugging native code here, because if I'm out in the field, that's usually what I'm doing.

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I use to take with me UnixUtils.

UnixUtils are a set of commands of Unix ported to windows, so I only have to add a directory to the windows path and then i'm able to use most of the common linux command in the shell of a windows machine, making my job easier.

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vote up 3 vote down

I would add LINQPad to this list. If you have to do anything at all with LINQ queries, it's must-have software. It has a self-contained executable so you could run it completely from a thumb drive if you wanted to.

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vote up 2 vote down

When I am debugging something on someones' machine, the first thing I do is install Vim. Join us, it's a way of life.

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May I add that we have cookies? – LuRsT May 7 at 13:50
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grep, definatly gotta have a grep tool of some kind.

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I recommend WinDbg.

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and FTP program like WinFTP and crossloop

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apache, php5 and mysql (as well as notepad++)

I also have some scripts that copy the php.ini file to the C:\windows folder,etc.

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vote up 1 vote down

My VPN Client Software ;)

MMmm Sweet sweet remote desktop. drool

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I was about to say: "Nothing" and I decide to double check my USB and I found VIM and my .vimrc and ProcessXP

I don't usually use it from there, but from time to time ( 3 -6 months ) I get into a new machine and copy them from the usb.

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I change my vimrc too regularly. I am thinking about putting it in source control. – thomasrutter May 5 at 1:45
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Ones not mentioned:

  • WinSCP (for all your S/FTP, etc connections)
  • LINQPad (for all your .NET code testing)
  • PuTTY
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vote up 1 vote down

I would add to the list this great OSS for Windows:

  • 7-zip. It can handle not only zips, gzs, bz2s, rars or arjs but even rpms or isos.
  • Winmerge. A directory/file comparation tool is always necessary.
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  • Strawberry Perl, I had to edit some batch files to use the USB e: instead of the hard drive c:
  • MinGW, for GCC, G++ and added GDB, maybe MSYS when I get around to it
  • MSVC6, just for console apps so far, haven't tried to include MSDN
  • Codelite, for an IDE, better than Code::Blocks and lighter than Eclipse
  • Ultraedit v9, more recent versions are too bloated and slow, and probably don't run from USB
  • Quite a few other utilities that come in useful, e.g. grep, ssed, batch files to setup environment variables and start Perl, GCC or VC, etc.
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vote up 1 vote down

I'm surprised JGsoft's excellent suite of tools hasn't been mentioned yet, particularly considering the author is one of us:

  • EditPad Pro (IMO, the best damn text editor there is)
  • RegexBuddy (the regex debugger)
  • PowerGREP (may not be vital if you're carrying Cygwin around, but it's more featureful than "real" grep and has a nice GUI to boot)

Sure, none of them are free, but they're sanely licensed and all of them support portable installation.

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vote up 1 vote down

I carry a VirtualBox hard drive file that contains the whole development environment for our project.

It takes about a minute to set up on a any new machine for development in a familiar environment.

Install VirtualBox, create a new virtual machine, plug in the usb drive, point the virtual machine to the hard drive file, boot into the dev environment from the virtual machien. Takes about a minute atop of the download time of VirtualBox.

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  • emacs
  • tucan (for windows backups)
  • putty
  • winscp
  • SVN repository
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