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raiboon2015-03-17 13:52:13
IT education
raiboon, 2015-03-17 13:52:13

How to write summaries?

I read a lot, watch video lectures, take courses. But I can not find the optimal strategy for writing notes.
A piece of paper and a pen - in principle, normally and quickly, but they are lost, and the handwriting leaves much to be desired.
Evernote - convenient, beautiful, always at hand ... But there are not enough opportunities.
Just in files - in markdown - not bad. Like. The only thing I don’t like is that you can’t insert pictures, not a single editor can highlight pieces of code, I often make mistakes in latex formulas.
Who, where, and how do they keep their notes? personal notes? Maybe there are more pleasant tools that are initially prepared for creating content with a variety of content (structured text, formulas, code, charts, graphs)?

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9 answer(s)
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littleguga, 2015-03-17
@littleguga

For my personal purposes - a block notebook with a beautiful and high-quality design. You have to understand your handwriting, otherwise things are really bad. If the lecture goes too fast, I write it on a draft, then I take out what I need in a clean copy.
If you want to insert pictures - laptop / computer + tablet (at first it will be inconvenient, then get used to writing) + word or something else (evernote did not use, word'a is enough).
At the expense of code highlighting - I'm sure there must be plugins for something (MS offie or Open Office, or something like that).

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Ranwise, 2015-03-17
@Ranwise

try gitbook
markdown, latex formulas are supported, there is code highlighting

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LooksWorking, 2015-03-26
@LooksWorking

I highly recommend trying any MindMap solution. XMind or Mindjet if Windows, Xmind if Linux and MindNode for Mac. Not to be lost - DropBox/GDrive etc. Many years ago, I used to keep all notes, notes, make a plan of something or just plans in this way. Convenient, clear and fast.
Wiki

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Mark Chigrin, 2015-03-17
@Black_and_green

Look in the direction of onenote, it is convenient, as it supports any data from text to graphs and videos. The problem is only with code highlighting, but maybe there are plugins. As a last resort, you can write a macro that will colorize the code.

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Boris Yakushev, 2015-03-17
@za4me

I write down the necessary material in a notebook in the course of training. Later I repeat everything (on a clean one, so to speak), but already in the form of a comment to the code, IMHO, paper and pencil / pen is the most convenient option.

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Vitaly Chudovsky, 2015-03-23
@pinnocio964

I wrote in OneNote. In general, yes, a block notebook and a pencil

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raiboon, 2015-03-23
@raiboon

I went through Google again and still chose stackedit with saving records to googledisk.
I do not want to mark the answer. About handwritten concepts, I immediately wrote that I dismissed them.
OneNote - Registered, logged in, but didn’t see anything useful - vyviglazny interface, latexa didn’t find ... not that.
OpenOffice, by the way, fits almost perfectly. It will be necessary to try to use it - but StackEdit looks more comfortable and faster.
I would also like to figure out how to draw drawings / graphs / diagrams in it, there is not enough built-in drawing tool from Google.

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AVKor, 2015-03-24
@AVKor

Judging by the original message, you need a note manager.
For example Zim . It's on DokuWiki .
Markdown, by the way, supports inserting pictures. And there is code highlighting (I don’t remember how it was in the original, but pandoc Markdown has it for sure).

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web_xaser, 2015-03-26
@webxaser

Pocket .

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