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Ben Halpern
Ben Halpern

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Who's looking for open source contributors? (October 8th edition)

It's one week into #hacktoberfest!

Find something to work on or promote your project here.

Please shamelessly promote your project. Everyone who posted in previous weeks is welcome back this week, as always. πŸ˜„

Happy coding!

Top comments (48)

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niamurrell profile image
Nia Murrell

Happy to have contributors on my beginner-friendly project!

I built a Node/Express/MongoDB app called ValueMax that lets you calculate the cost-per-use of the things you buy.

There are a few open issues in the repo and I'll keep adding more throughout Hacktoberfest. Everything from documentation to new features so hopefully beginner coders can find something to work on.

I'm a relatively new coder myself, so if anyone experienced (or not) wants to take a look through and suggest improvements or even new features, I'd love itβ€”you can add it as a new issue πŸ˜„πŸ‘πŸ‘

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jacobtstaggs profile image
Jacob Staggs

I have worked quite a bit with Node/Express/Mongo. I will gladly help if I find the time.

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ben profile image
Ben Halpern

Cool, I love consumer-facing OSS.

Very approachable stack too. πŸ‘ŒπŸ‘ŒπŸ‘Œ

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jacobtstaggs profile image
Jacob Staggs

Send me a private message when you get a chance. Got a concern that I noticed and want to run by your and not make it public.

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hasnayeen profile image
Nehal Hasnayeen • Edited

Looking for contributors:
Goodwork, is a simple project management and collaboration tool for all kind of teams. It is open source and MIT licensed and self-hosted. A demo is available also at goodworkfor.life

Its still under development. Hopefully version 1 will be released by the end of the year.

Built with Laravel, VueJS, Tailwindcss and other stuff.

You can help by coding,or testing the app or general discussion on product features. An instance of the app is running here goodworkfor.life/. The app is used to develop the app, meta πŸ˜‚

GitHub logo Hasnayeen / invobook

Self-hosted app for Time Tracking, Invoice Generation, Project & Client Management, built with Laravel & Filament.

InvoBook

Self-hosted app for Time Tracking, Invoice Generation, Project & Client Management, built with Laravel & Filament.


License Tests passing Laravel v10.x Livewire v3.x PHP 8.1

Hire me

I'm available for contractual work on this stack (Filament, Laravel, Livewire, AlpineJS, TailwindCSS). Reach me via email or discord

About Invobook

Invobook is a self-hosted app to manage team/clients, project & tasks, time tracking, create and sending invoice and more. It is build upon Filament and TALL stack.


Installation | Screenshots | Contributing | Supporting | Credits | License


Installation

Clone the repository

git clone git@github.com:Hasnayeen/invobook.git
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Set env variables

cp .env.example .env
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Install composer packages

composer install
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Screenshots ↑Top

Dashboard

Contributing ↑Top

To contribute join discord server link

Supporting ↑Top

Be a sponsor

Invobook is an MIT-licensed open source project with its ongoing development made possible thanks to the support by our amazing backers.

Support the development of "Invobook" by being a sponsor, reach at searching.nehal@gmail.com

Professional Support

If you need professional…




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yaireo profile image
Yair Even Or

Why does it look EXACTLY like Trello?

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hasnayeen profile image
Nehal Hasnayeen

Not sure I get you? Do you mean the design or the feature?

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yaireo profile image
Yair Even Or

The design shown on the README of the repo. don't you agree it does look "similar" to Trello, or you don't see the similarity..?

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hasnayeen profile image
Nehal Hasnayeen

I don't see the similarity except the task board section which is similar for all kanban type boards, other then that I don't find much similarity. All the section are reviewed by several designer in different forums and so far nobody has said anything like that.

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yaireo profile image
Yair Even Or

I am extremely curious about the motivation to spend incredible amount of time developing a tool that looks and does what Trello do for many years.

is the motivation purely business, to try catching a chunk of the same Trello user-base, or is it a try to make yet another task-board app that is believed by its created to be superior to the others already exist in the market.

I'm trying to understand the mindset of a developer starting such a gigantic project, and what does this developer hopes to achieve?

Please answer, if you may, in a way which is emotionally detached way, not to take the discussion to an unproductive path. Thanks

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juanfrank77 profile image
Juan F Gonzalez • Edited

To me it looks much more like Zenkit

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codemouse92 profile image
Jason C. McDonald

MousePaw Media is looking for C++ and Python developers who are interested in working on unusual, cutting-edge libraries, tools, and games.

Current Projects

Here's a look at a few of our current projects:

PawLIB 1.1: High-performance, memory efficient containers and utilities for the C++ language. We're expanding our testing library (Goldilocks), improving and expanding our data structures (Flex), making message output a delight again (IOChannel), and building a tool for streamlining the design of CLI interfaces (Blueshell).

Right now, we're working on iterators for the Flex data structures, adding a new high-performance, doubly-linked list implementation, and building our collection of sorting algorithms.

Omission is a game written in Python 3. It currently uses the Kivy GUI toolkit, but needs to be re-implemented in Qt5 (PySide2).

DiamondQuest is a brand new Python 3 game, which will use the Qt5 (PySide2) GUI toolkit. We're especially needing someone with pixel-art skills to create the retro-style graphics.

Ratscript: A brand new language which seeks to combine an innovative, obvious syntax with a powerful combination of paradigms. Ratscript is being designed specifically for the next generation of game development. Takes cues from Python and Rust, among others.

Anari: A vector-based animation engine implemented in C++, allowing for memory-efficient interactive animations to be deployed onto old and new hardware alike.

Infiltrator is an upcoming Python 3 party game. We have an earlier version implemented in C++, but we want to recreate it in Python3 and Qt5 (PySide2).

Our Stack

  • C++14 (C++17 proposed)
  • Compilers: Clang and GCC
  • CMake
  • Python 3
  • Qt 5/PySide 2
  • CPGF
  • Eigen
  • Git
  • Phabricator

Getting Involved

See something you like? Jump right in! We have a robust development platform, centered around a carefully-honed Phabricator instance.

NOTE: We are currently screening new accounts on Phabricator. We try to approve all new accounts within 24 hours.

For more information, visit mousepawmedia.com/opensource or contact developers (at) mousepawmedia (dot) com. You can also ask questions and join the discussion us on the Lobby chatroom on our Phabricator.

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szymach profile image
Piotr Szymaszek • Edited

I have been dabbling with a side project for writing books. I generally treat is as something I practice on, but if some front end dev would like to hop on and improve the look and feel of it a bit, I would be grateful. Backend devs are welcome too, of course, just let me know in advance, so I can give you a task.

And if you want some legacy project to work on, see c-pChart. It is a wrapper for a statistics library wrote with PHP 4, that I maintain for various folks out there that still use it. It is pretty popular, too.

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orimdominic profile image
Orim Dominic Adah • Edited

Could you please add a description/ a contribution readme or a how to run locally description to the repo please?

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szymach profile image
Piotr Szymaszek

Added.

I am currently in process of doing a frontend rewrite (single_page branch), so see if there is anything you would like to contribute based on these changes.

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orimdominic profile image
Orim Dominic Adah

Awesome. I'm checking it out now!

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szymach profile image
Piotr Szymaszek

Sure, I'll try to add one sometime soon, will let you know :)

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theredspy15 profile image
Hunter Drum

Multi Go

URL (GitHub): github.com/TheRedSpy15/Multi-Go
Language: Go
License: Apache-2.0
Idea: Combine multiple tasks into one command line tool, for use by IT & Cyber Security professionals.
Contributing: View readme

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lakatos88 profile image
Alex Lakatos πŸ₯‘

Nexmo is looking for #Hacktoberfest contributions this month! Merge a PR in a Nexmo repo on GitHub this month and they'll send you a limited edition #nextoberfest T-Shirt! nexmo.com/blog/2018/10/09/join-nex...

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manjrekarom profile image
Omkar Manjrekar

I made a repository called XbyY, that aims to be a database of commonly faced problems in software development, some of which can be actually easily solved using a library, framework or a software development methodology.

The problems that we will address are typically of the kind that cannot be easily discovered via a google search, either because it's verbose or a newbie like me might not know what to call it and if a thing like it already exists.

Xs are the problems and Ys are simple yet elegant solutions to it. The Ys could be libraries, frameworks or code snippets (not limited to it though). They may also be design patterns, data structures, etc.

It's an easy/medium PR. You can find the repository here. Thanks for reading! :D

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juanfrank77 profile image
Juan F Gonzalez

Question. How broad or specific can the problems be and also the solutions? For instance a common gotcha in React with state and stuff or something like proper architecture in a Spring app.

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manjrekarom profile image
Omkar Manjrekar

Yes that can be included. The problems may range from very broad stuff, like exchanging states like you mentioned, or testing, or an architecture and even narrower ones like how to do form validation easily (problems can actually be argued upon to be narrower or broader ones I believe). But solution has to be very specific so that someone who is having that problem actually finds solution helpful and understandable. It should contain resources so that he/she, in most cases will not have to look beyond these resources when practically approaching the problem. You can also include multiple solutions and tutorials links, etc. to those.

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yaireo profile image
Yair Even Or • Edited

Hi Ya'll. Ain't nobody got time for testing!

Tagify

A pet-project of mine that started as a super lightweight & flexible way to add Tags functionality to HTML (since the browser doesn't supports such input type out-of-the-box and with time I've added more and more features and now it's even a React component, but here's where i'm at:

The script has many different options, branching into many different possible scenarios, and every change I make to the code can possibly break one of those possibilities.

I've started writing integration tests (Jest + Puppeteer) but there are a lot of tests that should be written, and this might be a good opportunity for a person who wants to add some integration-testing skills to their CV (or just want to help out of good will)

I believe integration testing is better than unit testing because it can cover them also plus test user-interaction (browser events), which is a crucial part of the script, while also superficially testing the visuals (UI)

Thanks!

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gbafana25 profile image
Gareth M. • Edited

I built a very simplistic honeypot using an esp8266 microcontroller that I programmmed in Micropython. The esp8266 creates a telnet server, and must be port forwarded in order to be accessed by others. When a hacker logs into the server, they get a fake terminal interface, and they have some commands available to them (I tried to make it look like an ancient account processsing terminal from a bank). The original inspiration for this came from the Arduino honeypot found on reddit. This is my first reasonably-sized project, so any suggestions and edits are welcome. Link to the repo here

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rjriel profile image
Rey Riel

Happy #hacktoberfest! We’d love to have contributors to our open source repositories that help our Associative Engine perform the heavy lifting in terms of data manipulation and visualization.

Here are some of our open issues. Most of these are Qlik-centric but a couple are tagged as good first issues where you don’t need to know Qlik. Any help or feedback is much appreciated. Happy hacking!

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sobolevn profile image
Nikita Sobolev

We are building the strictest python linter ever!
We have just released the second version of our linter thanks to the #hacktoberfest contributors.

wemake-services / wemake-python-styleguide

The most opinionated linter ever

wemake-python-styleguide

wemake.services Build Status Build status Coverage Python Version Documentation Status Dependencies Status


Welcome to the most opinionated linter ever.

wemake-python-styleguide is actually a flake8 plugin with some other plugins as dependencies.

The Zen of Python, by Tim Peters
Beautiful is better than ugly
Explicit is better than implicit
Simple is better than complex.
Complex is better than complicated.
Flat is better than nested.
Sparse is better than dense.
Readability counts.
Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules.
Although practicality beats purity.
Errors should never pass silently.
Unless explicitly silenced.
In the face of ambiguity, refuse the temptation to guess.
There should be one-- and preferably only one --obvious way to do it.
Although that way may not be obvious at first unless you're Dutch.
Now is better than never.
Although never is often better than *right* now.
If the implementation is hard to explain, it's a bad idea.
If the implementation is easy to explain, it may be a
…

And there's so much work to do!
Our current goal is to provide new rules that encourage people to write a better code.

You can find out more about Hactoberfest tasks here: github.com/wemake-services/wemake-...

Let's make python code awesome together!

Any contribution is welcome! Any required help and guidance will be provided.
Feel free to ask any question you have in the project's issues.
Happy hacking!

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tux0r profile image
tux0r

C&P from last time:


I want to release a new version of my static blog generator in November or something. Possible tasks that need to be done anyway (however, if I need to do them myself, it'll be years...):

  • Integrate a search functionality via index files, ElasticSearch or something.
  • Split the main file (src/blogcpp.cpp) into more smaller files for easier maintenance. (Optimum: Integrate as much as possible into src/helpers.h without breaking that file's portability.)
  • Integrate libautoupdate for automatic update checks - sometimes I release new versions, you know? :-)
  • If comments are enabled, the supported comment systems offer a way to show how many comments were made under an article. Implement that for each of them.
  • Check if meson could replace CMake easily. If it does, do it.
  • Improve the Markdown parser: it lacks support for underlined headlines and non-standard features like GitHub's tables.

If nobody helps me, the next version will be released without any of those improvements. ;-)

Also, there is still the sufficiently popular ymarks project. It could need more testers. And probably some work on the server part because it is said to crash sometimes - I can't safely reproduce that...


None of those will get you Hacktoberfest credits (because GitHub is entirely uninteresting for me), but I'll like you more if you consider to contribute.

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theodesp profile image
Theofanis Despoudis

PRs welcome:

go-heaps: Reference implementations of heap data structures in Go

go-twilio: The UnOfficial Community Driven Golang API Library for Twilio

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apoclyps profile image
Kyle Harrison

Muxer, an open-source events aggregator build using React and Python. Everyone is welcome to contribute and earn contributions towards #hacktoberfest.

There are a range of labeled issues with #hacktoberfest for both React and Flask, however, we also welcome new ideas and contributions of all sizes so let us know if there is something you would like to work on that isn't listed.

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josephmancuso profile image
Joseph Mancuso

Masonite is looking for some awesome people in general to join the community. You can also join the Slack channel as well.