![]() ![]() Once it’s completely done, you will be able to sync your file system based note storage to mobile devices via various file cloud storage services like Google Drive. Also, we’re preparing a crazy feature in other project called Boost Hub. It will be a collaboration version of Boost Note but much more powerful. The feature will let you make custom react components, integrated with various 3rd party app apis like Github and Trello, and embed them into markdown contents like MDX. I've also had a better time dealing with whitespace characters there, so I use it for random of commands and I/O I'm working with.Currently, we’ve already prepared basic functionality of the feature and we are working on polishing its UX now. I still use notepad++, partially for that reason. I have found that Sublime is pretty slow with opening files on network drives. Lost everything in it (unsaved files, open windows/files, searches). I did get bit by running out of hard drive space during Windows updates, and the session file ended up empty. ![]() On Windows it has a session file in AppData/Roaming or something. Sublime has always been quick to restore anything I haven't saved. I do waste some time flipping through files, but there aren't that many to go through, and the search is there to deep dive into the entire history. I always have a window with just my notes folder open, and I make a new file for each day I take notes, named after the day. I already edit code in sublime, so it's comfortable for me to always have it open. I use Sublime for notes too, not because I think it's a really good way for taking notes, but more along the lines of the legal pad note takers: I just needed to jot stuff down quickly and didn't want to hassle with anything. It opens a "Find Results" tab just like another file, and it accumulates all you're searches there. The best part of searching in Sublime is the speed and the formatting of the results. Another useful trick is to add a ", *." after the directory you're searching to limit the files. ![]() You can right click a folder in the file tree on the left to search within that folder, or modify the folder you're searching in. Ctrl/super+shift+f is the hotkey as it is usually, which defaults to the folder the file is in. Most things start there for me and then end up being digitized. Personally I like to stay in control and not rely on some relatively small company still being around in 10 years time.Įdit: +1 also for using paper and pen for coming up with ideas, etc. On a different note, I would be careful about adding content related to work to outside resources (run this by somebody). I've been terrible at keeping this stuff up to date, but for the most part it acts as a good starting point and either myself or someone else in the team can update it. Again, I normally just add this stuff to a Wiki somewhere. Otherwise the knowledge/time dies when I move away from the project.ĭocumentation wise, I use Markdown (religiously keeping it to 80 characters) and Pandoc to build any kind of output. That way other people can benefit from them and help improve them if they are useful. If the code snippets are useful enough to me, I tend to add them to the repository under some title like "tools" or "scripts". ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |