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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 just use google notebook for URLs etc and a physical notebook for others :)

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Eclipse's @TODO feature - I use this for any notes and TODOs related to the Java project I am currently working in.
Physical notebook - For notes and TODOs that does not fall on the above category but is still related to the project I am currently working in.
Email - I use these for sending notes and TODOs from my office email to my personal email. But these are not related to work. These are mostly links, and texts about anything I want to research at home.

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i use treepad. i create a tree that looks like this:

- 2009
-- 01
--- 2009-01-01
---- client/project 2009-01-01 a description of what was done
---- client/project 2009-01-01 a description of the 2nd thing
--- 2009-01-02
and so on

i don't think it matters much if you use a wiki or treepad or whatever as long as its searchable. i like to keep things organized by day. at the "day level" of the tree i record and overview of what i did. in the children of that node, i put the details (sql queries, sometimes code snippets, etc). the big thing imo is to make sure it is searchable. treepad has a relatively fast search capability that lets me find when i did what and for whom i did it.

i started doing things this way in 2005. before that i kept a paper diary of sorts. before that (pre 2000) i didn't keep track of anything. i have to say that starting my daily treepad diary is the single most productive thing that i've ever done. i use it religiously and the rewards have been many.

-don

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I am surprised that nobody has not mentioned yet Devtodo, which is great app.

Emacs's org mode is also great in note taking and organising.

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i use my gmail to keep track of my important files ,so basically and send an eamil to myself with tags in the content so i can perform searching.

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Hello,

I use Zotero (Firefox extension) to keep web search, script, solutin, document. Also i use Trac to keep my tasks, checklist etc. And i use iPod.

And last one, my friend use iBob (i will explain it in our webpage www.javaloper.com)

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I use google sites to keep my notes and knowledge base.

This gives me web access, good integration with other google office tools, search, etc...

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I love Basecamp, we trialled it at work and never looked back. You've got to-dos, messages, writeboards, time tracking and some other stuff.

It's incredibly well-designed too, every part of the interface has been really thought out. It really does make our lives easier.

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I keep my reference documents for problems I tackled in a private wiki. This gets round issues of confidentiality, as the code I write is not open source.

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For me it's always been easier and more practical to just use the old pen and notepad. I do that for notes and to backup small tasks that otherwise I'd probably forget.

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FireFox Scrapbook (to hold pieces of useful info found on the internet), FireFox X-Marks (for synchronized bookmarks between all computers), EverNote and ... MS OneNote which is very good

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I often use an online outliner/task management system, http://checkvist.com . It allows to share my notes with other people, simple, and really keyboard friendly.

I was looking for a tool like this some time before, and didn't find one which would meet my expectations regarding user experience.

So CheckVist was written.

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I coded my own php based wiki engine.

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OneNote!

Truly, I've scrapped everything else I used to do. I love it and blogged about it here.

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I've become a big fan of OneNote as well. Non-intrusive, easily searchable and convenient.

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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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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 use

  • Google Notebook
  • ATnotes
  • Text files (w/ NotePad++)
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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'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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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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vimoutliner for hierarchial notes. vimdot for diagrams and graphs.

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Emacs Org Mode

http://orgmode.org/

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

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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 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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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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