Also, I can stylize different documents with CSS. I use a black document whenever I write a pure reference manual, normally I combine 2-3 courses of material and duplicate parts of it into a new cheatsheet
This is what I use as my ongoing excel VBA / Visual Basic cookbook for work related things
My rule of thumb is I validate every piece of code snippet that goes into my dynalist
this way I can 100% rely on every note on here
Its full of code snippets, examples, and best reference manuals I’ve collected from a variety of sources.
Excel is a good example of this since a lot of documentation is really old, hard to look at (a lot of authoritative websites in these topics still look like websites from the 90’s), or outdated so this gives me a better manual than anything else I find online. Also, the MSDN website (microsoft docuemntation) is one of the worst-looking user-unfriendly sites out there, so its imperative I have my own manual
Sometimes the best solutions and answers / templates are found only on stackoverflow, or some other site, and this helps that I can consolidate / organize / view my information in any way I want
I also have manuals from everything to accounting, real estate, physics, mathmatics, engineering, etc whenever I need to brush up on some concepts depending on whatever hobby / work project I’m working on
Some notes have standard-operating procedures for how I determine what the least-number of steps it takes to capture information
I also have a document for purely generating ideas as well
the list goes on and on
