advanced
lsif-clang
advanced | lsif-clang | |
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25 | 4 | |
- | 33 | |
- | - | |
- | 0.0 | |
- | about 1 year ago | |
C++ | ||
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Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
advanced
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Contributing to the cause: doing it the open-source way
GitHub advanced search
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6 ways to find projects for Hacktoberfest 2023
GitHub's advanced search. GitHub advanced search provides tons of filters to find repos and issues according to our preferences. You can filter by language, extension, issue labels, number of stars/forks, etc. 🔗 Link - github.com/search/advanced
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The Llama Ecosystem: Past, Present, and Future
See https://github.com/search/advanced there are various date options
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Help finding a project/repository
You can try playing around with advanced search.
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How to identify technologies ?
Usually when I as a user want to check if a technology exists or is legit I do a GitHub search like a GitHub advanced search or a Google Advanced Search, and for the Google Advanced Search if I want it to search for things in GitHub I will put https://github.com/ in the "site or domain:" field. Google puts more popular results closer to the top so usually I would just click the first result and then look at the number of stars on GitHub and if the number is low (like less than 1000) it's not a sufficiently popular project. You could write code that automates the process of doing a Google Advanced Search or searching GitHub by using Selenium or maybe just making an API call or HTTP request then using something like BeautifulSoup to scrape the site (BeautifulSoup converts the site into an object that you can query). GitHub just uses plain HTML, CSS, and JavaScript without using a framework like React or Angular so it shouldn't be too hard to scrape.
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What do i do to become hireable?
Next, find a project that takes contributions (many do). You said you know TypeScript and JavaScript, so search for repositories in those languages. You can use GitHub's advanced search to search by language, just set the language to JavaScript or TypeScript and click search, you don't have to fill out anything else. Alternatively, if there's a tool or website you like to use, see if it's hosted on GitHub and check the "Issues" tab in the repository's main page.
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Codeberg – Fast Open Source Alternative to GitHub
Are you being sarcastic?
If not, GitHub recently updated their search feature and it's pretty good.
https://github.com/search/advanced
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Best ways to: historically get issues/PRs in a specific periode with some criteria — overview of multiple members tasks like assigned issues, PRs they are requested to review etc?
I can do an advanced search on GitHub: https://github.com/search/advanced, but I find it hard to find open issues in specific repos, that are not assigned to any one.
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How long did it take you to really grok Nix(OS)?
GitHub advanced search
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I am a REAL bad software developer and this is my life
I don't know for sure, but it might be possible for you to make the jump from hobby to professional. There are a lot of technical books on Amazon, there are various coding and programming communities and groups on Reddit and Facebooks, and there are lots of potential codebases that you could try working on on GitHub (I personally used GitHub advanced search at https://github.com/search/advanced ). Sometimes on GitHub they label coding issues for beginners with the "easy" label which you can search for using GitHub advanced search. Oh, and there are coding bootcamps which take a percentage of your income after you're hired, plus there are programs in the US like Revature and SkillStorm that will put you into a shitty junior coding position for two years at $15-$20 an hour but then if you do okay or good at that and get good references you can move to a non-junior level position after that at much better pay. In my experience you usually don't know how well you will perform at a job until after you actually have to do that job.
lsif-clang
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The technology behind GitHub’s new code search
In the top right corner of the tooltip it will say either "Search-based" or "Precise" - in this case, you're right, we don't have the abseil-cpp repo indexed so it falls back to search-based as you describe.
We do have a C++ code indexer in beta, https://github.com/sourcegraph/lsif-clang - it is based on clang but C++ indexing is notably harder to do automatically/without-setup due to the varying build systems that need to be understood in order to invoke the compiler.
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GitHub Code Search (Preview)
Interesting because on https://lsif.dev/ I see that LSIF support for C++, which basically is just a wrapper around clangd AFAIU, is deprecated. Is there something else that replaced it?
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SCIP - a better code indexing format than LSIF
We already have an LSIF indexer for C++ (lsif-clang); however, that is not as feature complete as the other indexers. Moreover, the codebase is forked off of Clang 10, so upgrading to newer Clang versions (and build a SCIP indexer on top of that) will be a challenge.
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Google Is 2B Lines of Code–and It's All in One Place
- Go:
Why are not all repos covered?
Because different languages have different build systems, so inferring the right build commands, dependencies etc. is not so straightforward; these are necessary per-requisites for compiler-accurate cross references. We're working on fixing this with auto-indexing: https://docs.sourcegraph.com/code_intelligence/explanations/...
For C and C++ specifically, auto-indexing is challenging because of the large variety in build systems, informal specification of dependencies (such as in a README instead of a machine-readable format), and platform-specific code.
Outside of auto-indexing, we do have an indexer for C and C++ right now (https://github.com/sourcegraph/lsif-clang) which can be run in CI; that way one can generate an index and upload it to Sourcegraph on a regular basis. It is 'Partially available' (https://docs.sourcegraph.com/code_intelligence/references/in...) right now. We're keenly aware of the interest in C++, and are working our way through different languages based on usage.
What are some alternatives?
legit - web frontend for git
cppinsights - C++ Insights - See your source code with the eyes of a compiler
supertux - SuperTux source code
codechecker - CodeChecker is an analyzer tooling, defect database and viewer extension for the Clang Static Analyzer and Clang Tidy
latex-french-report - Document class for french reports
scip - SCIP Code Intelligence Protocol
impermanence - Modules to help you handle persistent state on systems with ephemeral root storage [maintainer=@talyz]
color_coded - A vim plugin for libclang-based highlighting of C, C++, ObjC
gitlab
LLVM-Guide - LLVM (Low Level Virtual Machine) Guide. Learn all about the compiler infrastructure, which is designed for compile-time, link-time, run-time, and "idle-time" optimization of programs. Originally implemented for C/C++ , though, has a variety of front-ends, including Java, Python, etc.
The-Open-Book
Bazel - a fast, scalable, multi-language and extensible build system