My public account looks forward to your attention

Your browser bookmarks need careful maintenance

We programmers, often need to look up a lot of information through the browser, of course, after looking up, easy to click a star to save, so that next time to continue to watch, or first click a star mark, when there is time to look again, this must be very common.

But most of the students’ favorites not good classification, cause a lot of pages are melting pot together, even if you want to find out once the collection of books to see, when you clicked on your favorites, see a tuo tuo title page with different length exists at the time of your face, you just started learning desire may have been exhausted. And finding a particular web page in such a jumble of favorites is inherently inefficient.

As effective programmers, this is unacceptable.

So sort and sort your browser bookmarks and make them work of art.

This is my favorites, and if I want to find a web page, IT probably only takes me a few seconds to locate it. Moreover, the use of such favorites is in itself a physical and mental pleasure. Simple, elegant, fast.

If you want to use my favorites, which I have already exported, you can download them using this link and import them into your browser: bookmarks download address password: 674H Google Drive

Browsing the API with Dash + Alfred is silky smooth

There are some limitations to how these two apps work together. Alfred is great on the Mac, and if you’re a Mac user but haven’t used Alfred before, I’d really recommend this app to you. With it, your productivity on the Mac will increase exponentially, and with Workflows, it’s so powerful that you can’t imagine it without it.

Dash is an elegant API search tool that lets you download API documentation for various versions of languages, third-party libraries, and even open source API documentation on GitHub. What’s more, using Dash to access the API is a real pleasure with its fast and elegant UI. When you look up a class, you can see the method, constructor, and specific API information at a glance.

We used Dash’s official Workflows to work with Alfred, as shown in the GIF:

After the configuration, we first go to download the Android O API, and then set the shortcut key to AD, the following can be psychedelic access to the API operation. In any interface, press Option + Space to pop up Alfred. For example, if we want to see information about the onClick method, we just type AD onClick enter to jump to the API.

Silky and smooth.

ProcessOn has nothing you can’t draw

ProcessOn is a free drawing site, but you can pay to get more advanced experience. ProcessOn also has a free service for students and nonprofit groups, and if you apply, you can get advanced experience.

I have an invitation link here, use this link to register and get a few more free files: link



ProcessOn can basically handle all your diagram needs: flow charts, UML diagrams, sequence diagrams, mind maps, and other diagrams that we programmers use, you can draw them in an almost dumb-ass way, without any tedious setup interface to interfere with your thinking.

MWeb is probably the most useful MD editor on the Mac

MWeb is an excellent MD editor for Mac. It is powerful and focused on MD. It has various modes, such as document library and external mode, can upload images to the cloud with one click, and can even be associated with your WordPress blog, preview the blog format and publish directly.

The biggest feeling I get when I use it is a bit like using Evernote. Now THAT I’m used to taking notes on MWeb, its document library mode is really convenient!