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Thomas Bouffard for Process Analytics

Posted on • Originally published at Medium

Hacktoberfest 2021: Process Analytics makes its mark

Again this year, Process Analytics participated in Hacktoberfest 2021 and it was a great success. This post highlights some of the contributions the project received and we compare this year with the
results of Hacktoberfest 2020 πŸ‘€.

We offered the community the opportunity to work on our cornerstone bpmn-visualization Typescript library, its related examples repository, the project website and the recently released R package.

As part of the event, we updated our famous Hacktoberfest BPMN Diagram
with the Hacktoberfest 2021 theme:

We also introduced a GitHub organization profile with a contribution cheat sheet. It received a special Hacktoberfest branding during the event.

The Process Analytics contribution cheat sheet

Hacktoberfest 2021 results

To be honest, we did not expect to get many contributions:

  • There is a huge number of projects participating in Hacktoberfest, so it is very difficult to be noticed among the list. Hacktoberfest communicated that β€œover 90,000 projects [were] participating in Hacktoberfest across GitHub and GitLab this yearβ€œ.
  • We are not playing in a trendy field, which would make our project much more attractive

But we consider ourselves lucky, as we received some from people from different locations and with a variety of profiles πŸ€. Once again, we thank all our contributors.

Website

Nathalie Cotté gave us some feedback on the usability of the website. For sure, we will implement some of her recommendations in 2022 😊.

BPMN Visualization R Package

The first version of the R package (version 0.1.0) was released on 2 Sep 2021, shortly before Hacktoberfest. We were therefore interested to find out if it was going to attract attention for its first participation.

Adrien Lachambre offered the first 3 external contributions in the history of the package. They improved the documentation ✨ and the API 🀩 and were integrated in the 0.1.1 version.

We hope they help Adrien to get his Hacktoberfest πŸ‘• or to plant a 🌳.

BPMN Visualization Examples

Kyle Johnston is a Web Designer and he made several improvements to the design of the examples.

He first improved the navigation between examples to cover several known issues. Navigation is now easier because it no longer uses tabs 🍾. On the home page, a click on a card goes directly to the example. And to return from an example to the home page, just click on the project logo.

Bonus: Kyle improved the responsive layout and fixed some annoying glitches 😻.

Examples home page with a better responsive layout

πŸ€” We were curious to know how a designer came up with the idea to contribute to our project and here is Kyle's quote:

β€œThank you for the update and the opportunity to contribute! I do not work in [your] field; I searched for repos with design / frontend issues tagged with hacktoberfest.”

Perfect! We were very pleased to receive contributions from new perspectives, thanks again!

Comparison with Hacktoberfest 2020

Last year we also participated in Hacktoberfest 2020. We received a larger number of contributions than in 2021, but only for the bpmn-visualization Typescript library. They were all about BPMN Support and new BPMN Rendering features:

πŸ‘ This first round of contributions allowed us to improve the documentation, how we present the project and the way we interact with the community. This helped us a lot in 2021.

That’s all folks

We were super happy to participate in Hacktoberfest 2021 πŸ₯°, to receive contributions and to get feedback from the contributors.

We plan to participate again in 2022 πŸ₯³. In the meantime, feel free to contribute to the Process Analytics on GitHub or to contact us if you have any questions πŸ‘‹.

And don’t forget, to stay on top of the latest news and releases, follow us through:

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