I used to use Snippets Text Database, but now I switched to Evernote. At some point I need to migrate all of my old stuff there too. What about you?
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I like to write it up on my blog for two reasons. It helps me improve my writing and ensures I thoroughly explain the snippet. It also makes it quite accessible from wherever I may be. |
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I have a similar story. I used to store snippets of code in the Evernote before. However, at some point I decided to get rid of this workaround and, probably, to help other developers. As result, we together with my friend have made an application that solves exactly this problem. We are both using Macs, so the application is Mac-only and it is obviously called ‘Snippets’ :) It is still in development but is already working well and we are moving to the release very fast. Please, do not hesitate to give it a chance and request any features you wish to have. Thanks! |
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In version control, in a user directory. It's available for all, under SCM and out of the any project's directory. |
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+1 for DropBox (which, for those who don't know, is a very clean implementation of the local-folder-tree-synced-to-the-cloud idea). Here's why:
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Opera , Blogger, Gmail and Gears. In Opera Ctrl + 5, to open my Edit posts window , start search and view. With Code Formatter I might even get some syntax highlighting ; ) When I do add some new code snippet Blogger sends an email to my Gmail and when properly tagged it could be found from there by searching: from:me good tags, Enter |
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Well, for a start, it depends on your definition of a snippet. I divide these in 2 categories:
For first, I use SnippetsEmu plugin in vim. (for those prefering emacs I would recommend YASnippet) For second I used to use just a bunch of plain text files, all in one directory, and then I would go through them with a search tool (grep, some gui search tools, find, ... these varied with time). Every once in a while, I go manually through that directory and filter out what I think I'll really need, by the rule of "if you haven't used it in the last 6 months", and delete the rest. Then the stuff I consider useful I put in one file conveniently named snippets.txt, and comment it out with a useful line or two. But then again, that's just me. For someone who's using several languages in their work, some tool for keeping snippets according to language would surely come in handy. Just the other day, while searching for something else I came across this thing - Code Warehouse I downloaded the trial version, and it works nicely. Tree view, syntax highlighting for several languages ... everything ... I don't like the fact that it puts all your stuff in a database file, but someone will probably find that convenient as well. I just don't work often with databases, so it's a little bit confusing to me. The downside is that it is not free. If someone knows a free version of a program with those capabilities, I would be interested to hear about it. Sorry because of a little longer post. |
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StackOverflow! If you have a code snippet worth saving then it's probably the answer to a question that others will have as well. Ask that question and then post your snippet as an answer. Next time you need it you don't have to even remember that you put posted it on StackOverflow -- it should come up in a google search. |
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I use StackOverflow. Simple code (such as hexadecimal conversion) to interesting algorithms (polygon rendering) to tips and tricks. The reason why is that no single repository I've ever used has suited me - I need to access it everywhere, on any computer, it needs to be easily searchable, and it needs to require little to no effort to keep up to date, modify, note, find, test, etc. Google does the searching for me, and StackOverflow holds it. Further, others improve it - almost like an open source project - noting corner cases, problems, suitable and unsuitable uses, etc. The internet is my brain, and I don't have to worry about cross platform issues, moving it from one type of media or platform to another, backing it up, etc. What other tool is so powerful and useful? The only drawback is that I don't have access when I don't have the internet. That's really not an issue, though, these days. The internet is as important a programming resource, nearly, as the compiler. -Adam |
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There are different types of snippets, and how you handle them will be different. Generally I have code for reuse, code I've come across that could be useful, notes, and useful links. Code for reuse needs to go in to version control - pick your poison, but anyone will do. Well call me old fashioned, but what's wrong with simple text files. I think the problem is more down to how you organize your information, and what you use to search. I have a well laid out folder structure, which I can search. I also can have a copy of anything in version control in this folder structure too. There are numerous tools that will do a good search of text in folders - Spotlight, Google desktop, various editors, grep. I say keep it simple, then you never have to worry about database formats, moving from platform to platform etc. I've also taken to using DropBox as a way of syncing it between machines and having it accessible from the web. |
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I use personal wiki TiddlyWiki for my useful stuff not only code snippets. I can sync it to my website, so I can access it anywhere, anytime. |
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I have a small snippets project on sourceforge.net. |
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I have a private site on Google Sites, and I keep them there:
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I keep all my code snippets in a code repository. I've been using Subversion for 3-4 years, but recently I'm contemplating the move to GIT. The snippets are loosely organized into object libraries based on their function. As I make changes to the snippets I check in the changes. I'm a OSX user, when I need to find something, if I can't find it via the file structure (based on function), then I use Spotlight to locate the snippet I'm looking for. |
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I use my case management / software development software... Fogbugz. I just make a case, or email in the code with a suitable title in the subject so i can search for it later. I am considering creating an account of snip@domain.com so i can auto file them away as snippets I want to keep or links I want to remember. What this does is provide me an instant search engine on the contents of the snippet in-line with my case manager. |
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I just store them in .snip files and let the IDE "Find in all" or google desktop search find them when I want them. I've mapped the file extension onto the IDE, so opening a snippet file gives me code highlighting and an easy way to copy the snippet into my code. It's not very exciting, but it works for me. |
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I suggest Surfulater at www.surfulater.com. With Surfulater you can permanently save anything you find on the web, in other applications and on your hard drive, and organize it however you want. You can categorize, cross reference and do full text searches. Plus tag, annotate and edit whatever you have saved to make it all the more valuable. And it has a powerful search facility. Code snippets can be just one of your many categories of things you save for reference. The place you got them gets automatically annotated for you. They have a special template specifically for code snippets. They have lots of testimonials there, e.g.:
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ActionOutline allows you to store text in a tree structure as you see fit. |
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I don't keep snippets. Usually they're too specific to the project or data structure I'm working on. Plus, I'll probably have a better-fitting way of accomplishing the task next time. |
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If code in Django, use www.djangosnippets.org. For my personal snippets I use gist.github.com and use it for team work. Also since I code in VIM, I use SnippetsEMU. |
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I dont use code snippets any more. Just storing them in somewhere ready for copy & paste has the same disadvantages any copy & paste code has: when you find a bug, you have to fix it in many places. I have tried to get rid of snippets by making it extremely convenient to put this working code into a reusable form. Now I have this setup: I have a Java project, with this layout:
The directories "math" and "swing_factory" etc. each contain completely separate working code, usually just one source file with one or more methods. The build script iterates over all the directories and compiles each separately. So basically I have a directory and a source file for each snippet. To reuse a snippet, just create a subversion external directly to the sourcecode, or make a svn copy of the directory. The next step is to add unit tests into the test directory, these too are automatically picked up and used in a continuous integration server. Also, some sourcecode is for different java runtimes. For this I can have an optional build.properties in the etc directory of each of the mini projects, which is automatically picked up by the buildscript. This file also contains the maturity of the project, which I use to generate an overview of all the libraries:
With all this I have a very scalable system. It is extremely simple to add a new snippet / project, just create a directory and add the source file. The minimum requirement is just to compile, and if I want it can be extended with tests and more code as required. |
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There is no "Acceptable Answer" - use whatever works best for you and your work. For the few snippets I need handy I keep them in Dreamweaver's snippet repository. I also have a few .txt files for references that I keep on my flash drive for when I travel and use either someone else's program or my portable Notepad++ - But that's just me. I could use Evernote, OneNote, Ubernote, a TiddlyWiki, or any of a million other things. In the end, what works for me may not work for someone else. Look at your workflow, and figure out something that works best for you and your situation. |
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I use http://snipt.net/ for the majority of my code, but I also use Code Collector Pro for some bootstrapping templates. |
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As silly as this sounds (and not to put myself on any kind of pedastal), I wrote my own snippet tool. I have to go back and check the links above, but at the time (a year or so ago without SOFLow) I just couldn't find a basic tool that wasn't free, or required me to have some additional IDE or anything installed. So I wrote my own. It gave me a great change to try out SQLite (how I store the snippets) and it allows me to store my VB/C#/TSQL/HTML/CSS/Whatever snippets in an independent fashion. Plus it has the drag/drop, quick copy/paste type stuff I was looking for. It was a great coding exercise for me, I have a couple of colleagues using it at work, and I can easily port or export the app as needed. |
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I use GMail and label them with "Code".. Very easy to search and accessible everywhere. Good luck! |
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I use CodeKeep, this way my snippets are close at hand. If I'm at the office or at home i always have access to my most valued snippets (and a few thousand others!) |
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I'm using my brain - I've found it the most portable solution, and the lookup speed is unmatched by anything else. If memory assisted by IDE autocomplete can't easily reproduce it, it's probaby too "clever" to belong in production code, or should be part of an API library. |
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If it is a snippet that I use often, for example:
Then I'll throw
into my .vimrc file. Mapping #P to type out the snippet. if it's significantly large, I use google notebook. |
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If they're useful, I usually have them somewhere in the source code. If they're common, I put them in appropriate *Utils class (or) in my commons package. If they're made of drinkable magnificentness, I'll think about posting them on Stackoverflow or writing a blog post about it. Apart from that, I don't really have snippets collection. Too much work maintaining it, and not once have I used some piece of code I thought was worth saving! |
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Anything that's really reusable becomes a class in my core library, so I don't really keep a collection of snippets. And like any good library, I keep it in source control and regularly build new releases. Any of my projects that depend on the library get automatic bugfixes and performance optimizations whenever I release a new version. Much better than a snippets library, if you ask me. EDIT: AnonJr's makes a good comment below, basically saying that the weight of the library can become a burden. I totally agree. My personal core library (in Java) has more than 100,000 lines of code, and very few of my projects actually use all that stuff. When I distribute an application based on that library, I actually use a dependency-analyzer (GenJar) to build a new JAR file, based only on the classes from that library that I've actually used in the application. It's all part of the build-script, so I hardly even think about it anymore. |
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