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Artem Kalachyan2014-06-27 08:23:55
Programming
Artem Kalachyan, 2014-06-27 08:23:55

Where to write down interesting subtleties of programming?

I decided, in order to read books properly, to start a kind of database where I will write down interesting thoughts found while reading. For now, I'm thinking of creating a new notebook in Evernote, but it seems to me that it will be a little inconvenient to store pieces of code there. Maybe there is some thread service, where it is more convenient to do this? Of the requirements - at least offline access from mobile devices, maximum - the ability to add / edit in the same place.

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22 answer(s)
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afiskon, 2014-06-27
@Bringoff

Blog , no options.

7
7rulnik, 2014-06-27
@7rulnik

Gists?

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Alexander Fedotov, 2014-06-27
@orderbynull

To your blog

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0re1, 2014-06-27
@0re1

I keep my notes in a git repository.
I write notes in markdown format, so that it is easy to edit in any editor, but at the same time I don’t give up formatting at all. Also, markdown can easily overtake MediaWiki, HTML, and other formats, which helps with publishing.

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leclecovich, 2014-06-27
@leclecovich

They say that https://raindrop.io is cool. I use evernote myself.

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dotzero, 2014-06-27
@dotzero

On a Mac, I store pieces of code in kapeli.com/dash
And from web services I use https://coderwall.com/

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Crash, 2014-06-27
@Bandicoot

I use sandboxes:
jsfiddle.net
pythonfiddle.com
rubyfiddle.com
You can save code in any of them

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Egor Merkushev, 2014-07-03
@egormerkushev

If Mac, then you can look towards CodeBox .

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OnYourLips, 2014-06-27
@OnYourLips

one note.
It recently became free. I decided to try it and after five minutes I already exported the records to it from Evernote, which I deleted.

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Roman Sivakov, 2014-06-27
@rsivakov

support.mcubedsw.com/kb/code-collector-pro-manual

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hazestalker, 2014-06-28
@hazestalker

Trello maybe. But it's more for projects

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DaNHell, 2014-06-28
@DaNHell

Citanotes
Convenient, practical, beautiful and well-implemented.
Support for capturing text with html enabled, internal glee
Support for "intelligent" tags
And of course backups in the cloud with access.
When I bought it, it still cost a penny, but all this was not in fact.
in general I recommend

R
RomanAkaMagician, 2014-06-28
@RomanAkaMagician

Evernote (for articles), Blog (LJ - search from Yandex works well there) for notes.

J
janexis, 2014-07-02
@janexis

blog )

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stream13, 2014-07-03
@stream13

Solutions are not universal, but worthy of attention
ZIM
MyTetra

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charon, 2014-07-03
@charon

I write to the wiki installed on my hosting - this is so that in one day everything will not be covered with a copper basin, as happened with Catch, Springpad and a bunch of other services

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gimntut, 2014-07-03
@gimntut

I use tiddlyspace.com I connect
the rus and hl spaces to get the Russian interface and syntax highlighting.
The extensibility is infinite, because built on tiddlywiki technology, which allows you to connect plugins. And the ability to change the main page of your space built into tiddlyspace allows you to turn your page into a blog or a chat. And most importantly, this is a wiki, i.e. orderliness of everything.

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Ololesha Ololoev, 2014-07-03
@alexeygrigorev

For simple things I use Evernote, for something more complicated - MediaWiki, I have been using it for several years.

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Egor Ogurtsov, 2014-07-03
@mrdubz

On the web - https://snipt.net
On a computer - Codebox (MacOS)

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r1ch, 2014-07-04
@r1ch

trello

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zotovby, 2014-07-07
@zotovby

Definitely OneNote.

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riddans, 2014-07-07
@riddans

I use Google Keep for notes, temporary photos, and a workout plan. For voluminous notes, I prefer the closed google+ feed.

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