personal_notes
til
personal_notes | til | |
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2 | 4 | |
12 | 7 | |
- | - | |
7.7 | 0.0 | |
6 months ago | over 2 years ago | |
Shell | HTML | |
Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 | - |
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personal_notes
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Ask HN: What is a sustainable methodology for taking notes of your learning?
I keep a relatively large amount of notes (1), which are fundamental to my learning.
My notes are essentially books in markdown format, which I can open with the editor/IDE I use when working on any project.
My opinions are:
- the vast majority of the effort is spent on cataloguing knowledge when adding new notes (that is, keeping each book consistently structured); this is something that no tool can do, and as a consequence, any tool will probably do equal.
- a consequence of the cataloguing effort is that the brain better remembers the topics stored.
- searching is where the other effort goes; I've found that as long as the books are consistently structured, and one puts a bit of effort to make concepts easily findable, a textual search does well. probably, a tool to do fulltext search may help in some cases, but I rarely find the need
For things that require rote memorization (say, System-V x64 calling conventions), I use Anki.
I take notes almost only for computer/science related stuff. If I had to catalogue diverse topics, I'd probably just use subdirectories.
(1): https://github.com/64kramsystem/personal_notes/tree/master/t...
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One Year of TILs
It seems that this HN post got some interest, so here's my TIL repository: https://github.com/saveriomiroddi/personal_notes :)
til
- MdBook – Create book from Markdown files. Like Gitbook but implemented in Rust
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One Year of TILs
I think I came across something similar related to TILs and that motivated me to start my own TIL and that has really helped
If you are interested here’s the link: https://til-mraza007.vercel.app/
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Ask HN: How do you organize your knowledge?
Personally I used pocket to save all the links with tags
And save all the things I learn into mdbook hosted on my github.
Here’s the link: https://til-mraza007.vercel.app/
Here’s the source: https://github.com/mraza007/til
I put everything into a markdown file and save it on github
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Ask HN: Do you keep track of things you learn everyday
I would love to see how do you keep track of things you learn everyday when working on projects.
Personally I keep a git repo and separate page on my website so it can be useful to others too.
https://github.com/mraza007/til
What are some alternatives?
ankicommunity-sync-server - A personal Anki sync server (so you can sync against your own server rather than AnkiWeb)
mdbook-confluence
nb - CLI and local web plain text note‑taking, bookmarking, and archiving with linking, tagging, filtering, search, Git versioning & syncing, Pandoc conversion, + more, in a single portable script.
org-roam - Rudimentary Roam replica with Org-mode
til - Today I Learnt ...
MkDocs - Project documentation with Markdown.
CS230_notes - My (old) notes from Stanford CS230
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
KeenWrite - Free, open-source, cross-platform desktop Markdown text editor with live preview, string interpolation, and math.
mdbook-kroki-preprocessor - Render Kroki diagrams from files or code blocks in mdbook