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If it exists, where can I find an Eclipse Cheat Sheet Repository?
I mean, Eclipse has this "Cheat Sheet" feature (Help -> Cheat Sheets), but although being an easy and powerful feature I haven't seen people using it, for example for Tutorials.
As mark mentionned in his answer, if you have installed plugins, chances are they come with their cheat sheet.
As mentionned in this IBM article Building cheat sheets in Eclipse V3.2, you can:
make a Help search for the term "plug-in": it will return cheat sheets -- along with other content -- that match your query.
But refining your search by adding "cheat sheet" to the query might narrow the results too much and exclude useful content.
explicitly show the cheat sheet results if you display the search results in categories, using the category button.
Take a look to the Dzone's one.
Good Luck!
The closer you can get is what VonC answered answered. After researching over the internet I couldn't find a central place where you can download cheat-sheets and use it as tutorials.
Maybe a market niche for those tech-entrepreneurs. :D
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I have been searching for some tool to organize my development notes, ideas and features on diferente projects.
I saw diferente tools that did part or what I need but nome combines all.
I know I can do it, but dont have the time.
Right now I use different tools to manage:
By Project
By versions
Features
Note
requests
bugs
etc
Basic features I whould like:
Organized by project
By version
What is it ( Note, idea, feature request, bug, etc
Import/Priority
Deadline
some sort of tag to catalog it
Code-snippet, to better illustrate
Image to better illustrate
I'd like more, these whould do for now.
Does any one know of some tool that those this, or most of it ?
Thanks
We are using Jira. Jira is a bugtracker, issuetracker etc... You can combine it with many add-ons (for scrum, github functionality)
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MS Word is nothing short of irritating to use for any sort of software development work (notes, documentation, etc.), which is likely why many people use other tools (notepad++, etc.)
Asides from turning off spell-check & grammar check functionality for a word document, our only other option is to create a new style for the document, and disable proofing for that style, as documented here: Systems documentation and MS Word
Has anyone out there come accross any particularily good custom dictionaries which covers words common to engineering, software development, etc.?
This would certainly be helpful in aleviating the frustration level a bit. The dictionary could always be imported into other word processing tools as well.
Cheers and TIA - Ray
Change the language to something obscure like Farci or Klingon.
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I am looking for a wiki project that is editable by developers and can have comments and history, much like everything else, but also has the following features:
A way to tag or version the wiki in an intuitive interface that any competent developer can use
A way to deploy a tagged or versioned snapshot of the wiki with the option of stripping it of any editorial history.
The use case is to have a team of developers able to fluidly update documentation in the lifecycle of a project and have the necessary internal dialogs, but then have a way to package the documentation in a polished way so that it can be included with a commercial product.
The ideal solution, if this software exists somewhere, would be to have some type of facility so that you can do say, PDF output to send to a commercial printer or have a way to do custom templates depending on the parameters of the deployment.
Does any sage developer out there know of such software?
I would take a look at GitHub's Gollum which seems to fit your requirements quite well. They also support a bunch of different markup alternatives, and both Markdown and Textile have converters to PDF (and probably a bunch of the other markup choices as well).
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is there any well written perl open source out there (not using any kinda of framework) that i could use as sample for learning and good pratice of the perl...
I've searched around and found many things for PHP, but nothing in perl that uses no framework.
Thanks in advance.
Have you tried browsing CPAN? You can find code there doing pretty much anything, and many distributions post links to their github repositories, so you can follow along in the development process.
CPAN Ratings has reviews and rankings of a large number of releases, which helps you differentiate between good releases and bad ones, but being able to make this determination for yourself would be best, which you get through learning and experience.
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One of my projects needs to show users where they rank in certain calculations. I inherited the graph structure from the previous programmer and had to leave it alone while I worked on other parts of the site.
It's time to make the graphs more meaningful, so I'm looking for books/websites/etc about graphs. (Not graph theory!) Charts that convey comparisons at a glance.
Everyone suggests The Visual Display of Quantitative Information by Edward Tufte and that's spot on for what I'm looking for, so anything related to that would be great.
Naturally, personal experience about what to do or not would be helpful as well.
I found Stephen Few's book "Show Me the Numbers" very helpful.