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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!

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A text file or set of text files checked into a revision control system.... – Curt Sampson Jun 26 at 3:42
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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
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@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
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423 Answers

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I use the Zoho Notebook www.zohonotebook.com

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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.

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

Simply using pen and paper.

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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

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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.

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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

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

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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.

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I use a paper notepad and either windows' notepad or linux' kjots. Additionally I keep notes in the source code I am working on (mostly the 'why' something was down).

As someone said before: "Make sure to write everyhting down.".

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I have been using a tool called clockingIt www.clockingit.com it lets me create projects and then tasks inside the projects. tasks have different priorities, severities, a description and a trail of comments I leave every time I update the task.

I mainly use this tool to track my time, so when I am working on a task I clock in on that task and at the end of the month it generates my timesheet.

it is open source as well. It is a great replacement for post-it notes and also keeps track of my time!

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A sheet of paper....

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

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I've been programming for over 20 years and sadly I have had the same problem as the OP, until I discovered the LiveScribe pen this year.

http://www.livescribe.com/

It has totally changed my note-takeing life! It has 4 main benefits:

  1. It's a pen. At the end of the day it's a pen, so you can scribble/doodle/write notes, just as you always do...but...
  2. It's a RECORDING pen. When you dock the pen with your Mac/PC, it uploads what you've written and then OCRs it! And the OCR is remarkable. I have THE worst handwriting I've seen. Really, it's terrible, yet this thing nails it every time. Which leads me to...
  3. Your rantings are searchable. Because everything is OCRd, you can actually find what you scribbled a year ago. This means as you fill up more and more pads, you can always find what you want.
  4. (this is beautiful) You can tap 'record' and scribble a mark anywhere you want on a page, and start talking out loud (like a dictaphone). At any point in the future, you just tap your scribble on any page and the recording is played back instantly. All of the audio is uploaded to your Mac/PC upon docking the pen too. This is pure gold, and frankly is the killer feature for me. I can actually think out loud while I'm writing, or record a meeting and go back to what was said at any point. So incredibly useful.

I honestly can't recommend this enough. It's like GPS for me; once you've used it, you can never go back!

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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

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i used doc.google.com ,it can have excel, doc files, and export them to be a office file. or you can just start a collaborative site, and post anything you like.

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Omnifocus! Best task/list/item tracker i have used so far.

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Emacs Org Mode

http://orgmode.org/

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vimoutliner for hierarchial notes. vimdot for diagrams and graphs.

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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.

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On Mac OS X, I've been extremely happy with Mori for years. Unix commands, install guides, general notes, robust built-in search. And you can feel safe trying it out, exports your data and.. never actually forces you to register. :)

Mori is a digital notebook that makes it easy to record and organize your thoughts. Unlike the alternatives, Mori doesn’t box you into one way of thinking. Imagine a notepad that grows and grows. No matter how big it gets, you can search it in an instant, as if it’s all written on the back of your hand. Notebook, project manager, research assistant, and more. In other words, Mori lets you decide how you want to keep your notes, references, tasks, clippings, and more.

Lately I've started exploring Scrivener, "The biggest software advance for writers since the word processor." I've found it more motivating to maintain good notes as the tool itself is designed prepares your work for publication.

Scrivener is a word processor and project management tool created specifically for writers of long texts such as novels and research papers. It won't try to tell you how to write - it just makes all the tools you have scattered around your desk available in one application.

Never be afraid to make mistakes. Scrivener's "snapshot" feature makes it easy to return to an earlier version of your text. Before starting a major edit on a document, just take a snapshot, which stores the old version safely away. You can then call up old snapshots for reference, or restore an older version of the text if you decide you prefer it to the most recent revision.

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I've just started using Bespin to keep note across the Web. it seems to have some promise, and in theory, you could create/host a wiki in bespin and access it from anywhere

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Notes in MS Outlook 2007.

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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.

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I use an outliner application called Bansai from Natara Software. It's a super-simple editor that lets you enter notes in an outline format - I try to keep Bansai open in one monitor when coding, and jot notes on anything from functions I want to re-factor later to reasons I made some design decision. Bansai is not free, but fairly inexpensive.

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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...

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I use

  • Google Notebook
  • ATnotes
  • Text files (w/ NotePad++)
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I have 2 large physical notebooks.

One has "Reference" written on the front, and one has "Work" written on the front.

The Reference notebook I use for general study notes, or things I come across which I think it would be useful to remember in future (e.g. notes on JQuery or OO principles). I write a page number at the top of every page, and maintain a "Contents" list on the first page. If something comes into my head which I think it would be useful to learn about, I add it to a list on the back page, and then when I have some free time I pick an item from this list to read up and take notes on.

The Work notebook I use for more project-specific notes (e.g. brainstorming on a project design, or drawing up a task list). Again I number every page and maintain a contents list on the front page, although this contents list only includes references to important pages.

When I reach the end of a Reference / Work book, I start another one!

The best thing about this method is its simplicity, and its easier to mind-map / draw diagrams in a notebook than through your computer.

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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

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I'm going to have to give another nod to Evernote. For now, it is the solution I use. Just a few reasons I find it useful as a developer:

  • The ability to create synchronized as well as local notebooks (to satisfy security concerns)
  • The builtin screenshot snipper tool is top notch, and it works well with a tablet. Hit print screen, jot some notes, and it's in your notebook.
  • Search is good. Can even search text within screenshots!
  • It can index and seach handwritten notes (uses MS Ink technology, I believe)
  • I can get to it from my Android phone easily
  • The tagging system is effective
  • It's convenient and can be called to duty with a simple hotkey combo

I have tried a few other tools, and a few GTD apps. This is the one I'm using for now, until something better rears it's head.

Hope this helps!

-- Sean

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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

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anything important goes into google documents, accessible from anywhere. all the rest - drafts, too small/unimportant remains on notebooks that I keep losing monthly and starting a new one...

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