vote up 407 vote down star
344

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
19  
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

426 Answers

prev 1 3 4 5 6 7 15 next
vote up 0 vote down

I use MS One Note at work, and it works pretty well. I also write a blog and put a lot of notes on there.

Have also looked at Evernote, but was not very impressed with it. Not very easy to organize things like in OneNote.

One con with OneNote is that is not free. So I have it on my work machine, but not on my other computers, so I can't standardize on it.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

SharePoint offers a number of flexible tools with its wiki, list, and document libraries. We use it to hold all of our project artifacts, including best practice snippets, how-to's, etc.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Another emacs fan here. I generally start most notes out in OrgMode. It provides a nice outline style that still allows for free form notes as well. It's also nice because as I identify things that need to be done I can mark them as TODO, schedule them and have them show up in an agenda type view of things to do. Additionally you can set a deadline on them as well which will then make the item show up earlier in the agenda with a count down of when it should be done. I am also a fan of EmacsMuse which among many other things is a personal wiki. There is also some tie in between the two packages I believe that will allow you to publish both org and muse files to html/xml/rss/pdf... Both also can make use of remember mode.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I'd like thn.gs

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

My personal notes tend to go down on paper... whatever paper is lying around at the time.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Another vote for a plain old (big) text file and TextPad.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I could write a ton on what I do and why!

Basically, I use standard 3 ring notebooks, with squared paper.

I do this, because I find it is the most flexible method. It is easy to merge existing documentation and my own thoughts. It is easy to re-organize. The use of squared paper allows me to do diagrams and tables either in portrait or in landscape mode.

For small projects, I use a single notebook to hold several projects. For larger projects, I use one to several notebooks.

Random notes are simply kept in a notes section, and reorganized, as the organization becomes obvious.

All notes are dated.

When I convert notes to documents, I use Wordpad for the first draft, because of it's simple word processing capability. (The more complexity you have, the more time you waste on the prettyness.)

I try to keep one small topic per page to simplify reprinting.

Eventualy, documents become formalized, and are converted to Word or PDF files. (When this happens, it is no longer my problem.)

This method stood me well in my career as a programmer and analyst. In fact it got me a years worth of consulting. I got a contract to document the large system I helped to develope. I was the ONLY programmer (of 20) on the project who had bothered to do any documentation at all.

I was able to justify doing documentation (to others), as it kept me sane while doing on-call support and trouble-shooting for the whole system.

The method I used for this was an enhancement to the above notes system, with considerations for the incremental nature of the notes for a whole system.

Perhaps someone will ask a question about this topic.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I usually just open a plain text file and save it to my jump drive; however, I just started looking at InCollector, which provides more structure, directories and tagging, as well as search/filter capability.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I just started working just a few weeks ago so I don't really have a working proces for this. However I'm trying out Remember the milk, which seems to work pretty well. It's just list with some notes added. But this is an interesting issue. I'm definitely going to check through this list of programs posted by people and see if I can find something interesting.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I carry around folded sheets of graph paper, pack moleskin or similar notebooks if i'm going somewhere, or use whatever paper is available to scratch notes. On the computer i often just keep a couple ongoing email threads with myself, pasting stuff in as needed. Email info and notes to/from my mobile device that way too.

At home i try to boil, condense, and organize the info into OneNote. (Excellent app.) As for development techniques, code snippets, and programming stuff, use a simple blog or wiki to keep track. I like and use WordPress and TiddlyWiki.

Occasionally, ideas are best expressed as demo or prototype apps, which end up in d:\dev.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

1) A good text editor with a hierarchical outliner mode (e.g. Emacs + org-mode, or vimoutliner). why? Because programming involves drilling down into increasingly precise statements of the original task.

2) Your revision control system of choice and local checkout of the source code why? Because the most precise definition of the task usually is code; leaves fall off the Todo Tree and into the tree of source code.

Text files, a GNU userland and revision control go together like coffee, milk and sugar, and this arrangement gives you the flexibility and freedom to adopt new tools as you choose.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I used to really like legal pads. I never missed anything, and everyone was quite happy. There's nothing like waving a legal pad around with pages of crossed-out tasks when the more Dilbert-themed managers wander by for showing progress.

That is, of course, until after a couple years the legal pads had accumulated several pages or so of low-importance, high-tediousness tasks.

Obviously, those types of tasks should have expired and disappeared, but I continued to copy them over and over again. I'm not sure what drove me to do so. OCD?

I probably should be all "Yo yo yo... I gots myself a tasks wiki integrated with VS2008 Team Server, and as I enter or complete items my current location is all imported-like from my iPhone and marked up on my Google Earth super-mashup along with the GPS locations of everyone I've done talked to about it... Later, I'll do a GE flyby on my completed tasks... way cool"

Nah. For years now it's all Notepad, KEdit, and post-its.

KISS.

Of course, I can't read post-its on my monitor from a client's site... so I may be due for a re-think. Webcams, maybe? :)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I use legal pads on hashing out rough ideas. Once I'm actually coding I tend to just write extensive notes to myself in Visual Studio, including liberal use of TODOs. As someone else mentioned OneNote really a great app as well, esp. if you're pulling lots of info from various sources.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

For quick random ideas, I have a plain text file that I can quickly append to using Quicksilver (ctrl-space . random idea tab a tab n enter). I also keep a physical notebook (nothing fancy) by my bed for emptying my brain if it's keeping me awake.

To-do lists go on Ta-da Lists.

To work out anything complex I use an A4 lined notebook or a whiteboard.

If I'm working with a colleague on a design, we use a whiteboard then take photographs, which get emailed around an written up.

link|flag
vote up 10 vote down

We use FogBugz, and all notes from the dev team go into the wiki. There are also general engineering/networking questions, and they go into an engineering wiki.

This way, even quick notes are found in one place and last forever. And you have the added benefit of being able to easily correct or update older notes.

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

I wrote my own very basic one for my personal code snippets but am thinking of moving them over to a blog shortly when I re-do my website.

At work we're investigating using the "Clippings" functionality within BBEdit. Basically the idea is to have a shared library that we all add to then redistribute occasionally but we're not sure how easy it's going to be to maintain.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

What a great question...

I use paper notebooks for most of my notes, which I try to keep sorted in binders or folders for future reference. Notes eventually evolve into project documentation, which usually fits in some kind of wiki-form. Classic Word-like documents are a no-no in my opinion.

Any structured e-paper-based approach failed for me. It's overly complicated and it's not portable after all. I do use, however, desktop post-it notes which are excellent for keeping code snippets, to-dos and such.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I like DokuWiki[1]

From the main page:

DokuWiki is a standards compliant, simple to use Wiki, mainly aimed at creating documentation of any kind. It is targeted at developer teams, workgroups and small companies. It has a simple but powerful syntax which makes sure the datafiles remain readable outside the Wiki and eases the creation of structured texts. All data is stored in plain text files – no database is required.

Supports syntax highlighting for different programming languages and more...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I have a "personal productivity" wiki with Wetpaint.

I've used standard written notebooks in the past, but they have the same recurring problems:

  1. Half of my notes are junk or temporary. So I need to keep re-writing the good ones.
  2. My notes become unsearchable. If you start going through 1-2 notebooks / year, how do I find the "last time I spoke with Client X" or the "date I changed code Y". You end up carrying around 2 notebooks at once.
  3. My notes lack hyperlinking, file storage and images. In other words, the paper notes simply couldn't mimic the mental mappings that I had created.

My new strategy has three parts, but one focus: good data should be digitized in flexible "wiki-style format". This happens in three parts:

  1. Scrap paper / Whiteboard: for "active work items". Contains things like DB IDs, mock-ups and other temporary items.
  2. Portable notebook: for random thoughts or things I need to write down before moving them to the wiki (say I don't have 'Net access). Really more of a creative drop-point than a working book.
  3. The Wiki: everything important should end up in here. I keep a daily "what I did" list and then archive off the weeks and months. This makes my personal activity history searchable. I keep an active "Wish List" so that I don't forget client requests. Having a wiki also means that I can upload files, add hyperlinks and actually organize my data (good old copy-paste).

Some people have mentioned blogs and I think that this is a reasonable starting ground for sharing. But blogs are a weak way to organize evolving data. Things change and wikis are simply the natural home for things that change.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I normally use notebooks for everything. Since it becomes very cluttered I have started to create text files and carry them on my thumbdrive. I still rather have the notebook in front of me for easy reference but the text file saves me on clutter. Hopefully soon I will figure out if I like the text format better.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

It's gonna sound stupid but a couple of years back I actually backed down a lot on notes trying to keep things in my head instead. If you take it step by step you'll learn to keep more and more stuff in there at the same time. I didn't bother to learn some kind of technique but I guess you should do what you feel fits best.

I do keep track of schedules, bugs and features in a plain text file but that is mostly to have something to cross out when I'm done. I've noticed how much faster I work and how my designs get better the more stuff I keep in my head -highly recommended!

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Started using Code Collector Pro for random things I find on the intertubes, books, etc. It's not baad.

But for visualizing problems, my trusty Moleskine does wonders.

Oh, and having a blog or other "online collection thingy" is really useful.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

I use InkSeine on my Tablet PC. It is incredible.

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

Post-Its for reminders.
Notebooks for meeting notes.
Text files (Notepad/UltraEdit/Notepad++) for tasks and time tracking.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

If you take notes and you can't find them later, then they are useless.

I've had good results from gmail for notes that I don't want to make public and a public blog for things that should be public. In gmail, I have a label called "notes" and inside notes emails I include an abstract and a list of keywords that describe the information. This makes the information very searchable and it is easy to update overtime either by saving an open item as a draft or replying to an item with a new email. All emails are addressed to me, unless I am discussing a problem with somebody else.

I think gmail wins for taking personal notes based on convenience, searchability, ubiquitous access, and potential collaboration.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

We at Crowd Favorite are developing a custom Wordpress site that acts as a:

  • wiki (WP now has revision functionality),
  • mailing list (setup a category to e-mail users on post/revision)
  • contact list (use microformats, create hcards)
  • code repository (create posts, pages)

...and so on. I think that covers some of the basic reference functions that any developer (firm) should have.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

At work I have an Oxford Composition notebook that I use for meetings. I use Notepad to keep track of things I'm working on, on a daily basis, and these are all stored in one folder, named by date, and indexed with Windows Search 4.0. I also have a whiteboard next to my desk, and I take pictures of it with my iPhone and upload them to Evernote, which translates the text and makes all my whiteboard images searchable. Not very organized yet.

(I have Moleskines as well, but don't use them for programming-related stuff.)

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Dawned to me, isn't Stack Overflow exactly the place to keep them? :)

As of until now, it's been TextEdit (OS X) in RTF mode, and Spotlight for the searching.

Edgies is tremendous for temporary todo-kind of notes. Kudos!

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Action Outline by Green Parrot Software

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Pencil and Paper are fine until that calamitous flood or fire comes along, also paper isn't very efficient for searching or copy/paste.

I use ToDoList for TODO lists and a folder hierarchy of text files which I search and categorize (by folder name) through a custom explorer-like notepad app I wrote.

link|flag
prev 1 3 4 5 6 7 15 next

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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