I have tried so many. I want three main things: first I want a web app, I am switching between multiple Win/Linux/MacOS machines multiple times a week and I want syncing and I don't want to deal with OS dependencies. second, want syntax highlighting, and last robust search. Quiver is amazing but is only Mac, Evernote doesn't have great highlighting, onenote kinda sucks in general. I have been using InkDrop recently. It does not have a web app, but it does sync across platforms.
medleytext.net/ is supposed to release a web app in July '17, so that is the next thing I am going to try.
Right now I just have a mess of notes in a few different platforms waiting for the right app. At this point I would pay good money for the right solution.
I never log-in to comment, but felt like it was necessary :p
I love Quiver. Besides the stuff Arman mentioned, I love having a defined view for all my data.
I gave each language it’s own “notebook” and I use the tag feature that’s built in.
BitBucket.org has a "Snippets" feature where you can save any code snippet you want. Their web UI has code highlighting and they keep your code in Git. The snippet can be private or public.
I love using Github's Gists. IntelliJ also has a way to upload a code snippet to a gist from within the IDE, which is an extremely useful feature! Great syntax highlighting support as well, and has edit history.
+1 same here. Used to be Tomboy Notes + Ubuntu One but when UO went out of service I decided to switch to a system that would allow for migration to basically any platform and service.
I used OneNote but didn't like the lack of proper syntax highlighting and not good search options. I use a google drive folder which I sync across my devices and for looking stuff up I just keep it open wih Visual Studio Code. Nothing revolutinary but works for me.
Currently I'm using TiddlyWiki (a local Single-File-HTML-Wiki) for storing my snippets. There I can add a description, tags and additional information like example usages or whatever I want. It's accessible from everywhere if you put it on OneDrive or Dropbox.
With the help of additional plugins, e.g. Highlight.js, we also get syntax highlighting.
It's very easy to use and has a lot of great extensions to offer. In my opionion the most important features are tags, to keep the things organized without the need of an hierarchical structure, and the great and very-fast-to-use in-text search, to search for keywords in your snippets.
Oldest comments (41)
Gosh I wish I had a better system. Looking forward to reading about what other folks do.
For a mac user there is a productivity app called Alfred: alfredapp.com/help/features/snippets/
and as a programmer the IntelliJ IDE.
+1 for Alfred, although I don't have the Powerpack yet so I can't attest to using the snippets feature. (oops)
I have tried so many. I want three main things: first I want a web app, I am switching between multiple Win/Linux/MacOS machines multiple times a week and I want syncing and I don't want to deal with OS dependencies. second, want syntax highlighting, and last robust search. Quiver is amazing but is only Mac, Evernote doesn't have great highlighting, onenote kinda sucks in general. I have been using InkDrop recently. It does not have a web app, but it does sync across platforms.
medleytext.net/ is supposed to release a web app in July '17, so that is the next thing I am going to try.
Right now I just have a mess of notes in a few different platforms waiting for the right app. At this point I would pay good money for the right solution.
Sounds like you've thought quite a bit about this problem Joshua. Are you on MedleyText now? How are you finding it?
Check out Quiver for Mac by HappenApps. Lets you mix text, code, Markdown and LaTeX. You can edit your code with ACE with syntax highlighting, etc.
--
Arman Gungor
Metaspike
I've been on the fence about Quiver, I should just try the free trial already.
I never log-in to comment, but felt like it was necessary :p
I love Quiver. Besides the stuff Arman mentioned, I love having a defined view for all my data.
I gave each language it’s own “notebook” and I use the tag feature that’s built in.
BitBucket.org has a "Snippets" feature where you can save any code snippet you want. Their web UI has code highlighting and they keep your code in Git. The snippet can be private or public.
Similarly, GitHub has "Gists".
I'm using the snippets feature from Dash.app.
I've been meaning to try Dash, how do you like it overall?
Dash is really good. Also the snippet feature.
The snippet feature is very plain. And because of that I like it. I hate tools which comes with an overload on functionality.
I suggest: Give it a try!
I love using Github's Gists. IntelliJ also has a way to upload a code snippet to a gist from within the IDE, which is an extremely useful feature! Great syntax highlighting support as well, and has edit history.
I'm currently using Dropbox Paper, combining Markdown and syntax highlighting for documents in a convenient folder structure. Works for me.
+1 same here. Used to be Tomboy Notes + Ubuntu One but when UO went out of service I decided to switch to a system that would allow for migration to basically any platform and service.
I used OneNote but didn't like the lack of proper syntax highlighting and not good search options. I use a google drive folder which I sync across my devices and for looking stuff up I just keep it open wih Visual Studio Code. Nothing revolutinary but works for me.
Hey,
Take a look at this - github.com/elvirbrk/NoteHighlight2016
This should solve syntax highlighting problem of onenote
Currently I'm using TiddlyWiki (a local Single-File-HTML-Wiki) for storing my snippets. There I can add a description, tags and additional information like example usages or whatever I want. It's accessible from everywhere if you put it on OneDrive or Dropbox.
With the help of additional plugins, e.g. Highlight.js, we also get syntax highlighting.
It's very easy to use and has a lot of great extensions to offer. In my opionion the most important features are tags, to keep the things organized without the need of an hierarchical structure, and the great and very-fast-to-use in-text search, to search for keywords in your snippets.
That...is really cool.