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That depends on the manual in question. If we're talking about the documentation of a third-party library I'm using, I put it in my repository.
For tips, I don't keep track of them at all once I've implemented them in my code & understood them. If I ever need a link to give someone, I search.
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I made some XSLT files and an XML TOC to point to several HTML text files in a folder. Lots of times, I wished I had a Wiki, and tested a few Wikis, upon which the domain I had the test Wikis on was hacked through a backdoor in one of the Wikis. MediaWiki is probably the safest, but is slow, and I prefer having the articles each in their own text file. Some day.
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I've recently installed Dokuwiki on my NAS. It just stores your pages as markdown .txt files - so you can just use any text tools (editors/grep/sed whatever) on your pages if you want.
The wiki interface also seems pretty minimal and very fast.
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I use an app to take notes, tree-organised, on my mobile devices. Started in 2001 with Palm, from 2003 with Windows Mobile, from 2013 with Android. In the last move seven years ago I developed my app, since I didn't find anything adequate. In the years I developed it to suit all my needs: text input facilitation (it's WYSIWYG of course), advanced search, internal links, encryption, automatic calculations including spreadsheets, image editor, tasks, progressive backups... This is the beauty of make your own app.
Encrypted files are sync daily on multiple devices.
Recently, reviewing it for an Android, iOS and Windows implementation refresh, I had a look at other solutions out there - including DokuWiki, OneNote and Obsidian - but I found them too cumbersome, slow and limited.
My main notes files, the personal and current work notes, have about 1,600 nodes/pages each. My oldest notes are from 2001. My job is knowledge and I do not have a good memory, so...
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I'm surprised no one mentioned Evernote. I switch between Evernote and OneNote depending on my mood. It's a bit of a shame the free version of Evernote only allows you to sync with 2 devices as of last year, but I guess they needed to push people to buy their premium subscription. Two devices is enough for me and you can use the website based version in a pinch.
Text files are fine but I really like the convenience and instant sync of cloud-based services and the
feature richness of dedicated note taking software such as
* image OCR
* clipping excerpts from websites,
* text to speech
* recording voice notes of meetings and transcribing them (not very well)
* being able to share notes and photos of whiteboards with co-workers
In terms of how easy it is to find stuff again, it isn't the software that determines how easy this is, it more comes down to the discipline I have when capturing things to add appropriate tags to them and file them in the right notebook.
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I'm surprised no one mentioned Evernote. I switch between Evernote and OneNote depending on my mood. It's a bit of a shame the free version of Evernote only allows you to sync with 2 devices as of last year, but I guess they needed to push people to buy their premium subscription. Two devices is enough for me and you can use the website based version in a pinch.
Text files are fine but I really like the convenience and instant sync of cloud-based services and the
feature richness of dedicated note taking software such as
* image OCR
* clipping excerpts from websites,
* text to speech
* recording voice notes of meetings and transcribing them (not very well)
* being able to share notes and photos of whiteboards with co-workers
In terms of how easy it is to find stuff again, it isn't the software that determines how easy this is, it more comes down to the discipline I have when capturing things to add appropriate tags to them and file them in the right notebook.
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I've done quite a few different things over the years.
I started out with a huge text file - like a diary. Then I moved to EverNote (before it was cloud based). I experimented with CherryTree (because I need platform independence with some of my machines on Linux). Then I moved to OneNote@ which was a compromise, was unstable and recently became difficult to export data from (which left me worried). Now I'm back to text files using Markdown - and images in folders.
I like this approach because:
- It allows me to attach diagrams.
- It's easily grep-able.
- I can separate different content into folders.
- Markdown allows me to view it in an attractive way and export it in neat formats for others to read.
- I keep control of where the data goes.
@ Work supported tool of choice - but not fit for purpose in my experience.
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Long time ago I found a very good looking Excel like grid open source control.
(C#, for WPF / Desktop UI)
Now the time to use it has finally come!
But.. can't remember what it was at all... and my search brings me nothing..
Any tips? Links? Something?!
EDIT
BTW, I am not really looking for an Excel clone, just a control that has a few column and lines and look nice enough, no formula needed! ^_^
EDIT2
Found this...
GitHub - unvell/ReoGrid: Fast and powerful .NET spreadsheet component, support data format, freeze, outline, formula calculation, chart, script execution and etc. Compatible with Excel 2007 (.xlsx) format and working on .NET 3.5 (or client profile),
EDIT3
Found this: GitHub - PropertyTools/PropertyTools: Custom controls for WPF: PropertyGrid, DataGrid, multi-select TreeView, ColorPicker and more
It seems to have a nice Excel like control... working on it now.. (in my spare time of course...)
modified 23-Jan-22 18:02pm.
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Looking good studying it now...
It might be too advanced! ^_^
Going to check some samples....
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Mm... this seem to be most about data manipulation..
What I want is a simple spreadsheet control to embed in my app...
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In that case this packages is an overkill... sorry...
"The only place where Success comes before Work is in the dictionary." Vidal Sassoon, 1928 - 2012
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Super Lloyd wrote: I am not really looking for an Excel clone
I suspect what you want is a "grid control".
I tried following in google and got results. You need to check the license.
free source grid control
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yes, yes, exactly!
Googling....
Also.. perhaps the DataGrid will do.. just need a generic model and a good looking style...
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I use 10|Tec's iGrid Control. works great for me.
ed
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well it's for home hobby project... avoiding humongous and / or paid components... which 10|Tec grid's seems to be both...
Other than that, it does look decent!
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Amazon.com : Convergent Design Odyssey 7Q+ OLED Monitor & Recorder, HD/2K/UHD/4K Recording over HDMI or SDI : Electronics[^]
I ended up coming across this because I googled "convergent design" which is a term my son came up with for D&D campaigns where no matter how you start, the various things players do end up converging on the main theme.
But now I have no idea what one would use this product for!
The description is quite the fascinating read, which reminds me a bit of what I used to do in the 1980's when I was working with B&W realtime image processing, LUTs, histograms, etc.
Quote: The Convergent Design Odyssey7Q+ is the most advanced, most capable, most versatile monitor/recorder in the world. The Odyssey7Q+ can record HD/2K/UHD/4K via SDI and HDMI. It can record RAW (with Record Options), uncompressed DPX and Apple ProRes 422 (HQ). The Odyssey7Q+ features an OLED 1280x800 monitor with true blacks, accurate colors, extended color gamut and a 176 degree viewing angle.Along with the best image in the industry, the Odyssey7Q+ also features an extensive array of image analysis tools, including an RGB waveform, RGB Histogram, False Color, Pixel Zoom with finger drag, three-mode Focus Assist and monitoring LUTs.The unique Multi-Stream Monitoring mode allows up to four HD video inputs to be viewed at once in a quad-split view or to be live-switched between in full screen. The Odyssey7Q+ weighs a little over one pound, is just one inch thick and can run on any power source from 6.5-34 volts. Monitoring The Odyssey7Q+ features a 7.7" OLED screen with 1280x800 resolution. The OLED display provides true blacks and accurate colors. A full complement of image analysis tools include a waveform (luma or RGB parade), a histogram (luma or RGB parade), zebra, programmable False Color, Pixel Zoom with finger drag, a three-mode Focus Assist and LUTs. The included LUTs provide proper viewing of the LOG and RAW modes available from numerous popular cameras, with programmable LUTs coming in the future.
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My guess is that the screen is just a disguise to hide the real reason for a significant share of the buyers of this device: For pirating copy-protected material.
You may have noticed that even though lots of devices have HDMI output, the only widespread devices with HDMI input are displays, which may be considered dead ends. You can't capture it. You will need equipment defined to be in the "professional" class, with a corresponding professional price tag. For an amateur pirate copist, it is too expensive. (Of course it is not for the professional one!)
Of course this recorder has a lot of legal uses in a professional environment, but I would expect them to buy the majority of their equipment through professional channels rather than Amazon.com.
Many years ago, DAT (Digital Audio Tape) was expected (by some ...) to become the successor of Compact Cassette. They had a copy protection system that allowed a consumer to make one generation copy of a recording, but the copy was marked as "No copy allowed" - even for your own recordings made through a microphone. If you plan on doing a lot of cut&paste, in several steps/generations, that is clearly not satisfactory, so I seriously considered spending three times the money on buying a "professional" DAT-machine that allowed you to ignore the copy protection. Fortunately, I hesitated so long that it was clear that DAT would be a flop, before I spent my money.
When I saw this product, I immediately remembered those pro DAT decks, and the devices you could buy to filter out the copy protection codes.
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Well, I wouldn't, but it reminds me of a conversation I had with a model I know.
Since the plague hit, she has been doing "remote photo shoots"*. She was of the opinion that the photographers she was working with couldn't record video of the sessions -- only take stills. If I recall correctly, she did say that she could enable or disable the photographer's ability to record video, but that the software would also tell her whether or not the photographer was recording it.
I do know that some online meeting software will do that sort of thing -- alert all participants that someone is using the recording ability of the software.
I told her that I was sure that recording her feed without her knowledge and consent was possible with little effort, but she seemed unconvinced. This device proves that the ability exists in an off-the-shelf package.
* Which is a whole ridiculous idea on its own.
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PIEBALDconsult wrote: I do know that some online meeting software will do that sort of thing
Isn't the results from the following google something that would capture the screen (not the software running) as a video? And any software running like loom would not be aware of it.
video screen capture software
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Looks like one of those monitors used in cinematography/movie making with recording capabilities.
If you look at photos/videos of movie sets you can see lots of screens around the set. The movie director has one, the director of photography has at least one, etc, and cameras have one too because professional cameras (think many thousands of dollars Hollywood studio non-portable cameras) usually do not have a built-in display.
Professional cameras usually do not have internal storage either. They usually record directly to external storage using a high speed link (traditionally Gbit firewire) so, that monitor is a kind of a two in one.
Sometimes, recording happens in multiple formats at once, say 16k and 2k. The high resolution 16k will be used to produce the end product while the low resolution 2k is used to produce dailies that can be used to check, among other things, if a certain scene works (might require reshooting due to light,etc, even if the actors were flawless) or can be used by the special effects team to quickly produce a rendering without the delay of working with high resolution images.
The monitor you linked allows daisy chaining of devices. It also provides some image analysis capabilities which can help composing a scene (histogram, etc) which will help determine the best locations for cameras, lights, characters, etc.
It is probably targeted at the entry professional level.
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Yeah, that was also one of my thoughts.
About twenty years ago my brother was trying to get into video. He bought a professional-level Sony camera and a stedi-cam rig. I think that such a monitor could be mounted on one of those.
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