![]() Often I find that the very act of writing it down commits it to memory, so I don't all that often look at the collection of notes! But if it weren't there, I'd need it. The LaTeX-specific section is here (though there's one or two others scattered about that site). So I've put these here just in case they are useful to someone else. I'm switching to keeping these notes in a blog as the most useful resource that I've found is other people's blogs explaining just how they got the text in their xterms to be mauve. A fun element of The Archive is the range of Keyboard Maestro add-ons that. I use it to break down my notes into years - by relying on the first element of the Note ID, which is the year. This could be useful if you want to show all notes tagged with a particular hashtag. By that time, however, I've usually forgotten the details of how I did whatever I did. The Archive allows you to generate and keep saved searches in a sidebar. Often these only need to be done once, until I do something stupid like upgrading my system. Curious, I decided to try it out (I used the nvALT variant), and input my first note on 17. The intro reads:Ĭollected here are a load of hints, hacks, and howtos that I have used at some point to get my computers to behave the way I want them to (as opposed to me behaving the way they want me to). So one day, I came across an article about Notational Velocity. I have an area called "How Did I Do That?". editing directories of plain text notes, inspired by Notational Velocity. ![]() If it's a way to do something, then I write a short note about it and put it on my webpage. Export from plain-text to a variety of formats (HTML, LaTeX, DocBook, etc). If it's a bit of actual TeX code then I either make a new style file for it (which I keep in a BZR repository) or I add it to my "default" style file (which I load for almost every document I write, and which is also version controlled).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |