@zvone187 Reading the comments it looks like you're keen for feedback & even though I haven't tried it yet (I will at some point), my first thoughts are that the name Pythagora is an interesting choice given that the tool generates tests "for your Node.js app"
If I didn't have the context that this article provides, I might have overlooked the repo if I had discovered it another way because I thought it was a tool for a Python codebase.
I founded AWW which had 1.5M MAU and was acquired by Miro in 2021. Now I'm working on making software development autonomous - https://github.com/Pythagora-io/gpt-pilot
Re name, yes, you're completely right. I didn't think too long when I was choosing the name - I just took what had a domain available. It will come to it's place when we support Python.
Btw, yes, I'm definitely eager to hear feedback so I'd appreciate so much to hear yours as well. Also, if you get stuck anywhere, let me know, I'd be happy to help.
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Cool article, simple & clear.
@zvone187 Reading the comments it looks like you're keen for feedback & even though I haven't tried it yet (I will at some point), my first thoughts are that the name Pythagora is an interesting choice given that the tool generates tests "for your Node.js app"
If I didn't have the context that this article provides, I might have overlooked the repo if I had discovered it another way because I thought it was a tool for a Python codebase.
Hi Mike,
Thanks! I'm glad you like it.
Re name, yes, you're completely right. I didn't think too long when I was choosing the name - I just took what had a domain available. It will come to it's place when we support Python.
Btw, yes, I'm definitely eager to hear feedback so I'd appreciate so much to hear yours as well. Also, if you get stuck anywhere, let me know, I'd be happy to help.