We've wrapped another Hacktoberfest season, and we want to hear all about your great experiences!
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We've wrapped another Hacktoberfest season, and we want to hear all about your great experiences!
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
Ben Halpern -
Kuvam Bhardwaj -
Viktor Pasynok -
thinkThroo -
Top comments (18)
I didn't participate as contributor, but it was nice that people controbuted in my projects. I think that the best thing is that few people was able to go into my project and fix typos and grammar error in my documentation that was included with the code.
Yes! Every PR merged in is valuable. I'm always up for merging PRs that fix those.
Creating something that people gonna use as a resource.
Love it! Do you have a link?
github.com/thisdot/tech-dev-tooling
github.com/thisdot/tech-community-...
github.com/thisdot/tech-learning-r...
github.com/thisdot/tech-conferences
I got to learn a few new things like Astro, GitHub actions, and the Twitter API. Above all the community of Open Source is awesome and welcoming. Hoping to contribute more and more going forward.
I love Astro and GitHub Actions. You're speaking my language now!
That sounds awesome! What did you do with the Twitter API 👀
It was actually this project Real time Twitter Data Analysis to which I contributed.
I did build a Twitter bot before but it was interesting to work with streaming tweets 🚀
That looks really cool!
It was an interesting experience, and always has been. This is my 3rd time participating.
Actually, this year's t-shirt design awsome.😃
Love the t-shirt design!
Providing a repo that allowed fresh developers get a PR in their first HacktoberFest.
I love that so much. Decreasing barriers to entry is so important.
It was an interesting experience, was my first time participating Hacktoberfest...started out rocky, but I managed to pull through, and I am looking forward to next year
Woohoo! Congratulations and keep up the good work!
I like the idea and the spirit of Hacktoberfest.
However, participating for the first time this year as a project I'm not convinced it works out.
I feel like the focus is less on using Hacktoberfest as a stepping stone to get into OSS development and more about just getting some commit into a prestigious project for the sake of glory.
What I'm missing here is the sustainability, the long term prospect.
Of course, it's the project's responsibility to reduce the entry barriers and make it as easy as possible to participate and ofc it's also the project's responsibility to guide/mentor potential new contributors.
In that regard, the GSOC seems to have a more sustainable concept.
On the other hand the low effort and low entry barrier for Hacktoberfest is what makes it appealing for both sides.
Would love to hear the experience from other projects and what you do to attract and most importantly retain new contributors?
From a maintainer's viewpoint, I think Hacktoberfest is a nice time to onboard new contributors and to find ways to build community around your project so you can be sustainable. Sometimes building community might mean joining other communities that participate in OSS projects or are interested in them so you can share new issues, continue to celebrate contributions, and invest in the growth of the project.