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Chris Bongers
Chris Bongers

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My hacktoberfest experience

What I Learned From Hacktoberfest

To be honest, it was a bit of a rollercoaster, I love the hacktoberfest premise, but wow what a lot of negativity around it.

I can't and won't believe everyone is just out there for the shirt, though it's a cool add on.

I loved being part of it, I finished my 4 pull request + more, and here are my key takeaways

1. I learned new things

The main thing for me was learning new things, not just coding-wise, but also in how to contribute, how to write proper tests, and even make clear what my pull-request was about.

The projects I've worked on were very good at helping and communication, so big kudos to you!

2. It was fun

It was fun doing something non-work related, almost refreshing to be able to provide value to open-source.
In the beginning, I was afraid it would be a long learning curve, but it's actually easy to get started with a small issue.

3. Would you do it again?

For me yes! It took quite a lot of side-time for me, but what I picked up was more than worth it!

Also, see my article about hacktoberfest

Here are the projects I worked on:

Latest comments (10)

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leob profile image
leob • Edited

Good post, I'm inspired, maybe I'll join, October is still young lol :-)

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dailydevtips1 profile image
Chris Bongers

You can do it!

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waylonwalker profile image
Waylon Walker

The kickoff of hacktoberfest this year was crazy. I saw so many spam labels browsing prs on various repos. I feel bad for those maintainers. Spamming these folks spending their free time maintaining a project is not ok, it's generally not to difficult to actually find a simple, but meaningful fix somewhere.

I started doing hacktoberfest at least three years ago and it has been a great experience. It was my first time commiting to open source. It definitely got me warmed up to the flow and now I commit a few prs a month. Many times is clarifying docs, fixing nitpicky and things, but they are generally warmly welcomed.

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dailydevtips1 profile image
Chris Bongers

For sure, you should want to do something constructive and learn from it.
It's also stupid to just add a word like "awesome" to a repo, what did that bring you as a person.
But well, luckily many people learn a lot from it.

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steelwolf180 profile image
Max Ong Zong Bao • Edited

I think given a reward system like that a lot of people is willing to game the system. For me, it's more like I get to learn to contribute to open source. Plus getting the t-shirt is a motivation but not the main reason for me to do it.

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leob profile image
leob

In my opinion the reward (the t-shirt) is silly and redundant, people's motivation should be intrinsic!

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dailydevtips1 profile image
Chris Bongers

100% Max, I feel the same about it.
It's just sad the negativity you see online about it.

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steelwolf180 profile image
Max Ong Zong Bao

For me, i prefer looking at the positivity of things. There's a saying in Chinese "A journey of thousand miles, starts with a single step". I personally believe that without this campaign, there won't be alot of awareness or people who might start to contribute to open source. Even a simple task like just the cleanup of documentation is important for open source projects as well to help in the adoption of the software.

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dailydevtips1 profile image
Chris Bongers

100% but there is that thin line between contributing and just being stupid about it... which I can 100% agree would annoy the owners of the software.

but you are right, let's focus on all the people that DID become better and learned something ๐Ÿ˜€

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leob profile image
leob • Edited

People who are just spamming/trolling/gaming the system and don't intend to make any positive contribution should get kicked out of the contest, banned for life and no t-shirt for them