vote up 407 vote down star
338

Where, as a developer, do you like to keep your code snippets, links, checklists, final solutions to problems etc?

I've fooled with Google Notebook, MS Onenote, TreePad, textfiles, and Evernote a bit (currently leaning toward Evernote). All have pros and cons but none seem to be really suited to developers. Is anyone super-happy with a collection / note system that's not just generic GTD, but with developer-centric utility?

Note: before posting an answer, check if your note-keeping method is already mentioned among the 400+ answers. Vote up existing posts instead of adding duplicates!

flag
2  
A text file or set of text files checked into a revision control system.... – Curt Sampson Jun 26 at 3:42
16  
Regarding **Note**: Do you really expect people to check 400+ answers to see if theirs is already mentioned? :) – Jonathan Sampson Aug 27 at 12:56
3  
@Jonathan Sampson: There are plenty of great suggestions, and SO provides sorting by votes or by newest. If an answer isn't worth a duplicate check amongst the great ones already posted, the answer isn't worth posting. – James Sep 15 at 14:20
show 2 more comments

424 Answers

prev 1 4 5 6 7 8 15 next
vote up 1 vote down

Microsoft Onenote - excellent tool

It works on my PC and on my Windows Mobile phone.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I used to use Basket Note Pads in KDE 3.5.x. However, after migrating to KDE 4.x, I am waiting for a KDE 4 version of it.

Currently, I rely on `physical' notebooks.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I put everything in Evernote. Windows, Mac, iPhone & wev clients and it's all kept in sync. I even put PDF docs and PDF books in my Evernote notebooks, then I can access them anywhere.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I personally use two methods, one being what JBB stated (paper notebook). The second is www.ubernote.com, which I have been working as a part of for the last two years. Ubernote has been coming along very quickly recently and gives me just about everything I need. Users of Microsoft OneNote or EverNote will conceptually understand the application, just about any user of an email client will understand the interface. I know I am an Ubernote evangelical, but working there, I have become pretty passionate about it. Using Ubernote, I can write notes in an editor similar to this one, share them with other people (normally coworkers or my girlfriend), add comments, clip web pages using the Firefox toolbar or bookmarklet, tag, search, etc. I use it to clip a lot of reference material and then look it back up later. Saves me from having to do a Google search for every nugget of information that took 20 minutes to find and I need to remember again.

Even though I write note taking software, I still can't fully give up my paper notebooks, for the common instances of:

  1. I'm sick of sitting in front of the computer and my eyes are bugging out.
  2. Taking a step back from the problem and writing it out on paper makes the solution easier.
  3. I want to do some drawings.

Shane

www.ubernote.com

www.shanetomlinson.com

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Jedit + Explicit Folding + Outline Plug-in

I got a bunch of plain text files on a directory searchable using Jedit's hypersearch feature. The outline parser plug-in offers a dockable tree view of the explicit or indent folding structured text. Other useful plug-ins are SuperAbrevs (folding header templates), CandyFolds (folding visualization) and more. Easy data syncronization with rsync (its just plain text files). www.jedit.org

http://plugins.jedit.org/plugins/?Outline

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3403/3659402148_1bfbf18f99_o.png

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

I'll throw my two cents in: I use Notepad++ and text files. Anything heavier (word, wordpad, onenote, etc.) is really too much for me. I like a clean and unobstructed window into the notes i'm writing without 200 features begging "use me! use me!". Only downside is that they (usually) get scattered all over my system and sometimes get deleted. Gotta fix that...

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I have used several things that were not quite satisfactory, most recently Notepad++. I like how it opens lots of files left open. OneNote is captivating, and I have tried it, but it did not quite work.

I am looking forward to the released version of Win7 with its nice screen clip grabber and using that in conjunction with OneNote--that might just be the right thing for me.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

Notes in MS Outlook 2007.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I keep txt files for each day locally like '08-19-09.txt'.

I find it easier to just grep through them to find what I am looking for. Of course, projects etc. get their own files.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Yup.Google notebook is the one you should use.If you want to store as documents use google docs.The recent acrobat from adobe looks quite sleek & glossy. However I haven;t explored it much.You can also use firefox addons such as evernote web clipper

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

A sheet of paper....

Since there a lots of them I use college blocks. And I have a big stack of them in office.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I keep notes by project and projects by web site using a text editor. The text editor I use, kedit, allows me to link from these text documents to the source directly and it supports it's own set of snippets.
For snippets, I have a search page that I maintain on the local server. It helps both me and the other programmers.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I use delicious to bookmark important/interesting stuff and use "to do" lists on google desktop to make that things get done.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

For notes and misc. code snippets:

CintaNotes

I keep this portable app in a Live Sync (previously called FolderShare) folder, so it's always synced across home and work computers.

To-do lists and similar:

AbstractSpoon ToDoList

Also portable, I keep the .tdl files in that same Live Sync folder

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I use Nocs, which I actually wrote myself. It's a simple, Notepad-like app that uses Google Docs for storage. I use it for all kinds of TODOs and snippets. I like it because I can leave it open both at work and at home and my files are always in sync. All the files are stored as actual Google Docs documents, which means I can search and edit them both within the browser and in Nocs.

Very similar to Evernote though.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

When all else fails, I use the 'journal' feature of Outlook

It's easy to add to and easy to find stuff using the timeline

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I maintain a notebook to keep interesting code snippets,examples topic.....

Simply using pen and paper.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Try google docs, for some existing code, you can copy and paste it in really quick. Plus it's online so you can reference it when your on the road or home.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I use the Zoho Notebook www.zohonotebook.com

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

What I do is take notes on a whiteboard/paper/whatever everyday.

At the end of the day I use jotnot to take an enhanced photo then save them to evernote.

Not perfect OCR searching with the paper(I have awful handwriting) but the whiteboards are pretty successful and I assume it will improve as evernote gets better.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

We use Confluence (wiki) where I work: http://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/

You have to pay for this one but there are free ones out there as others have mentioned.

we used instiki int he past: http://www.instiki.org/show/HomePage

it was pretty nice and free.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

On wikis, I like Daisy. It's like a wiki on steroids, and I find it great for documentation, brainstorming and keeping notes. It's also easy to share the information with other devs too.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I used tiddlywiki. It was easy to use and generally fits the bill for my needs. The tagging works well.

I suppose, however, that having an indexed drive would work just as well w/out having the need to use a special tool.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

We have a team-wide wiki to record all project details/documentation/design, everything really. Because it is just a wiki though, it requires some guidelines to make sure it remains organised. We are definitely looking out for improvements to the wiki software that allows us to organise the information better.

The important thing is the visibility the wiki provides to the team, and has become invaluable when team members move on from our company. The last thing we want to do is trawl through someones private documents to recover important information.

Make sure you think about this when writing notes: "Is this information going to be useful to anyone else other than me?".

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Every good text editor (and by good I mean Emacs and TextMate) has a mode/bundle for note taking, organization, etc.

Try ORG mode on Emacs, or the notes Bundle in TextMate. I use the latter.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I use the Eclipse templates feature to store my code snippets. They are easy to write and parameterize, and can be inserted into your code with an easy ctrl-space. That is, if you use Eclipse of course.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I usually take notes during a meeting on plain old Paper and Pen. Then I keep the paper around as long as I need it, usually only a few days. If I need to keep information for longer, I'll type it in and save it in a Word document or something.

I've played around with OneNote, but it doesn't seem to fit the need the best. Maybe I just need to find a good system for using it.

A couple people I've worked with have just used Notepad to type notes in and they save a single text file for each day of work. Then they can use something like Google Desktop Search to search through all their notes.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 0 vote down

Microsoft OneNote

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I typically use my blogspot account along with my moleskin notebook and mark different sections like "learning", "projects" with page markers. Even though I like this system many times I find myself having a lot of notepad files named after the subject/project.

Hope this helps.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

First, I am on Mac OS X, so I have access to some great tools, which aren't available on other platforms.

For notes, I use Omni Outliner Professional. Great tool for capturing notes. If I need to put in an image, I use Omni Graffle. And finally, for tracking actions in a GTD way, I use Omni Focus.

Together, and they work together well, they provide me with a solid suite which keeps me on top of things.

link|flag
prev 1 4 5 6 7 8 15 next

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.