Reorganizing My Digital Workspace
Christopher C. Johnson

Christopher C. Johnson @programazing

About: I’m a developer with 15-years of experience in the .Net stack as well as an interest in Angular.I’m known for taking legacy projects and updating them so they can be maintainable and have new features

Location:
Buffalo, NY
Joined:
Sep 11, 2016

Reorganizing My Digital Workspace

Publish Date: Feb 21 '20
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Image by fulopszokemariann

I recently came across a tweet by Kyle Shook that simply read What is your coding folder called? I didn't think much about it as I'd used the same folder structure for years. After reading some of the replies it occurred to me that I really should rethink how I store my code. This is the system I came up with.

Originally I used the same pre-made layout most everyone who uses Git does with one small twist, I had a trash folder;

  • Source
    • Repo
    • Where all of my projects lived
    • Trash
    • Where my short term experiments lived

I really didn't think much of it since I used one or two projects at a time. When I saw some of the more elaborate layouts it got me thinking that maybe I should organize things in such a contextual way that I could quickly find whatever I needed without much thought.

I started out by making a root folder called Dev and a clear divide between personal and professional.

Personal was sub-divided into the more common project types I tend to work with:

  • Challenges
  • Exercises
  • Mentor Assignements
    • Tasks assigned to me by various mentors throughout the years
  • Playground
    • Where temporary things like proof of concepts live
  • Projects
    • Any active project I'm working on
    • Inactive
      • Projects I'm not working on
    • Info Projects
      • Copies of informational projects like Awesome lists, onboarding steps, workflow outlines, etc.

Professional was mostly modeled after Grant Harwood's layout:

Client, Deployment Target, Role.

professional/fooinc/site/fooinc-api, professional/fooinc/managers/fooinc-managers-fe

Though there is also a folder called Interview Code Assessments where I keep a copy of every take-home interview test I've ever done.

Lastly, there's a folder at the top directory called nuget-packages where I store local nuget packages while developing them. I find it easier to publish them all to one place so I don't have to keep track.

After I got the folders in place and everything moved over I set up a task to back up my Dev directory to an external hard drive that I leave plugged in.

I personally use FreeFileSync to manage my file backups but you could make a script and schedule it with whatever your operating system uses. Just remember to filter out node_modules. In my case, FreeFileSync can save a profile as a batch script and I use Task Scheduler to run it when I'm asleep, well when I should be asleep anyway.

Just in case you want to copy and paste the folder names here they are all together:

  • personal
    • challenges
    • exercises
    • mentor-assignements
    • playground
    • projects
    • inactive
    • info-projects
  • professional
    • interview-code-assesments
    • client
    • deployment-target
      • role
  • nuget-packages

I hope this helps you the way it's been helping me recently.

How do you organize your code folder? Leave a comment below and let me know!

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