CodeTriage
advent-of-code-jq
CodeTriage | advent-of-code-jq | |
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81 | 232 | |
1,376 | 204 | |
0.4% | - | |
7.4 | 7.8 | |
4 months ago | 5 months ago | |
Ruby | jq | |
MIT License | - |
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CodeTriage
- Ask HN: Anyone looking for contributors for their open source projects
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💼 50 Tips to Land a Remote Tech Job Based on My 45-Day Journey to 2 Offers
3. Open Source Contribution
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Docs Deserve More Respect
I wrote a book with a chapter on how to write docs for other people’s code https://howtoopensource.dev
I also wrote an open source tool for writing and testing tutorials https://github.com/zombocom/rundoc and another that will email you undocumented methods of open source code so you can practice writing documentation https://www.codetriage.com/.
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Where to Find Open Source Projects for Contribution?
CodeTriage helps you contribute to open source by “picking a handful of open issues and delivering them directly to your inbox”. (Source: CodeTriage)
- Ask HN: What’s the best way to start contributing to Open Source?
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Idea for project for intermediate c developper
Here are open source projects listed https://www.codetriage.com/ You can filter for "C".
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Cookpad to discontinue Ruby interpreter development - let's help Koichi and Mame land a new job or support them via GH sponsors
The biggest untaped potential (IMHO) is not one company funding 1 full time maintainer, but EVERY company allowing and encouraging EVERY developer to help and work with open source. This was the basis of my web app https://www.codetriage.com/. I have a chapter on it in my book How to Open Source (https://howtoopensource.dev/), and I talked to Yehuda about it for about an hour after my last talk at Philly ETE.
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What do i do to become hireable?
You can also use websites like up-for-grabs, goodfirstissue, or CodeTriage to find projects with open issues. Find one that looks easy or interesting to you and comment on it, asking if you can take a shot at it.
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Student looking to contribute to open source
I recommend these resources to help you contribute https://www.codetriage.com/ (free) and https://howtoopensource.dev/ (paid). DM if you can’t afford a copy.
- Are there any open source projects on Github that a person can get involved in if they want to start helping with coding projects? I was thinking if a person wanted to get some credit for coding something that actually got implemented in a project?
advent-of-code-jq
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Ask HN: How do I get better at programming as a hobbyist?
If you just want a series of programming puzzles, check out the Advent of Code[1]
[1] https://adventofcode.com/
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What Happens After Agile Dies?
This goes against Agile, against what many have only known. You can try it, and see what happens. Try a challenge from AdventOfCode, spend a couple of days working up a plan first. Did you write a cleaner solution? Now extrapolate.
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When was the last time you used this? - Part 2: Algorithms
I have used BFS only sporadically to solve problems at work. DFS was usually a simpler or better choice. BFS is, however, an essential tool for Advent of Code puzzles - each year, BFS is sufficient to solve at least a few puzzles. BFS is also a very common algorithm for coding interviews.
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2023, a year in images
I'm staring to be a huge fan of the Advent of Code challenge every beginning of December. Everyday puzzle is a great excuse to talk to people of your company that probably you don't interact much otherwise. And /r/adventofcode subreddit fan-arts and community is fun to follow. I always entered after completing the daily challenge, otherwise it may be a huge spoil :D
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Ask HN: Programming Courses for Experienced Coders?
Advent of Code (https://adventofcode.com/)
It's not a programming course per-se, but it's a great resource to master the skill of coding and problem solving.
It's just one part though, it won't teach you anything about architecturing a bigger system.
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Having a Game I'm into Makes Every Day Enjoyable
For anyone currently looking for something that does this for you, may I suggest Advent of Code: https://adventofcode.com/ This is the first year I've really had time and space to enjoy it, and enjoy it I have.
Also - this article ends on such a weird note given the message that the rest of it delivers. The author has finally realized how valuable it is to have something that gets them going, regardless of whether or not it ends up being "useful", but then immediately stumbles over the fear of it not lasting and failing to achieve greatness in it and sharply concludes with that sentiment.
Perseverance through intermediate-ness into greatness is irrelevant to enjoyment.
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Stuff I Learned during Hanukkah of Data 2023
Hanukkah of Data is a series of data-themed puzzles, where you solve puzzles to move your way through a holiday-themed story using a fictional dataset. I think of it as "Advent of Code meets SQL Murder Mystery".
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Using only vim to solve AdventOfCode Challenges | Episode 1
This journey will transform you and challenge your creative and resourceful thinking. You will explore new possibilities with VIM, going beyond what you thought it could do. And as you advance through the Advent Of Code puzzles, you will truly transform yourself if you follow the two scenarios listed below.
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Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use?
I've been making a CLI for advent of code ( https://adventofcode.com/ ) this week: https://github.com/VitamintK/wang-aoc-cli
It's been satisfying!
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Does being bad at solving programming problems means not being a good programmer?
December started 12 days ago, and for my first year I decided to try the Advent of Code 2023, which is basically 1 programming problem everyday and they get harder and harder each day. I started HARD, I ate problems, day by day, until... day 10; things started getting pretty hard and couldn't do - I think - pretty average difficulty problems.
What are some alternatives?
first-contributions - 🚀✨ Help beginners to contribute to open source projects
LeetCode - This is my LeetCode solutions for all 2000+ problems, mainly written in C++ or Python.
Cataclysm-DDA - Cataclysm - Dark Days Ahead. A turn-based survival game set in a post-apocalyptic world.
aoc - Advent of Code solutions
awesome-for-beginners - A list of awesome beginners-friendly projects.
online-judge - A modern open-source online judge and contest platform system.
htop - htop - an interactive process viewer
Exercism - Scala Exercises - Crowd-sourced code mentorship. Practice having thoughtful conversations about code.
good-first-issue - Make your first open-source contribution.
codewars.com - Issue tracker for Codewars
Open-Source-Ruby-and-Rails-Apps - Awesome Ruby and Rails Open Source applications 🌈
materials - Bonus materials, exercises, and example projects for our Python tutorials