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Vox Populi: Best practices for file naming
Merlin Mann | Oct 23 2006
If it wasn't apparent from my pathetic cry for help the other day, even I -- one of your more theoretically productive persons in North America -- struggle with what to call things. Tags, files, and -- dear Lord -- the innumerable assets associated with making web sites, graphics, audio, and video projects; it's all a hopeless jumble unless you have some kind of mature system in place for what you call your stuff and its various iterations. Of course, if you're like me -- and I hope that you are not -- you still have lots of things on your desktop with names like " For prior art, I still treasure this Jurassic thread on What Do I Know where people share their thoughts on this age-old problem, but, frankly I haven't seen many good resources out there on best practices for naming. Anyhow, during a recent MacBreak shoot, I noticed that Alex and his team seem to have a pretty fly system for naming the video files that eventually get turned into their big-time IPTV shows. Thus, I turned to Pixel Corps' Research Division Lead, Ben Durbin (co-star of Phone Guy #5) for insight and sane help. And, brother, did he ever give it to me (see below the cut for Ben's detailed awesomeness). But, just so I don't lose you, do give me your best tips in comments: What are your favorite current conventions for naming files? How does your team show iterations and versions? Do you rely more on Folder organization than file names in your work? How have Spotlight, Quicksilver, and the like changed the way you think about this stuff? Ben shares how Pixel Corps does it, video style:
Dang. Thanks for that, Ben! To repeat: What are your favorite current conventions for naming files? How does your team show iterations and versions? Do you rely more on Folder organization than file names in your work? How have Spotlight, Quicksilver, and the like changed the way you think about this stuff? 86 Comments
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Maybe it's just me, but...Submitted by Herman the German (not verified) on October 25, 2006 - 12:40pm.
Maybe it's just me, but some "n00b-friendly" conventions annoy me like hell. One of them is the stupid "My..." moniker and the way Windoze and some of its apps keep forcing me to put stuff into folders according to filetype. So the screenshot to the article I just saved seconds ago is supposed to go into a completely different folder with hundreds of other images? "Great" idea. Not only do I have a dedicated folder for my stuff, but I keep it on a completely separate partition, so I could easily wipe the OS (Windblows, Mac OS, Linux, whatever) and keep the data structure intact. And I can synchronize it with a server partition. I organize it by subjects which I use for folder names, and I try to use names that are valid cross-platform. Since the folder structure says it all (and I usually don't displace my own files), there's no need to put the whole structure into the file name. And dates should easily be handled by the file manager/search app. For now, this is sufficient. But there will certainly come some "intutitive" OS interface change that breaks all that :-( » POSTED IN:
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