badge-generator
create-pull-request
badge-generator | create-pull-request | |
---|---|---|
8 | 5 | |
340 | 1,939 | |
- | - | |
4.3 | 8.9 | |
30 days ago | 14 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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.
badge-generator
- what are these buttons called in repos and how can I add them to mine?
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Upgrade NPM packages with GH Actions
I use a workflow similar to the one above that is implemented in my Badge Generator web app, which is built in Vue and Yarn.
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Creating dark mode for the first time
Looking through my classmates' contributions for Hacktoberfest, I found badge-generator - a cool tool that helps us create markdown badges for our documentations. The owner wants to implement the dark mode for the site, and since the tool is written with VueJS, I decided to challenge myself as I could also continue to learn this framework.
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Hacktoberfest: Challenge #3
Eventually, I remembered one of the repos that I've used before to contribute to one of the Hacktoberfest issues, I thought that it would be nice to give back (hint hintπππ something to think about when looking for an issue... hintπ) to that repo. I quickly gave up everything I was doing and went to check it out to see if it is even active and if it has any open issues I could work on. To my surprise, no one except the author has ever contributed to that before, so I am now officially one of the first contributors there.π
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Contributing to badge-generator
After browsing for a while, I found MichaelCurrin's project, badge-generator. The project is a simple interface for simplifying the creation of badges, used in several open source projects to show things like the version number of the project, whether the project is currently building, etc. A badge usually looks like this:
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First Time Participating in Hacktoberfest
I learned was that even if an issue seems small and something that you can handle, it doesn't mean you will not learn a lot out of it. During the process, I learned about a handy open source repo that helps to generate badges to make README files look prettier. And a cool tool that has all the emojis you need for your frontend.
- React and Vue apps - with and without Node
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2020 in review
badge-generator
create-pull-request
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Which features would you like added to GitLab?
Read the action.yml to find the entry point
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[Actions] How do I take my dev branch, build it, and then create a pull request to main with the latest build artifacts?
Something like this, according to the the pr action readme, branch is for the pr branch name, the action will create it for you, base is for target branch, both can be omitted. https://github.com/peter-evans/create-pull-request
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Automatically Open Pull Requests with GitHub Actions
You can create a pull request by using the Create Pull request action in our workflow. A cool feature here is that you can add some customization related to your pull request that can help in the pull request review process, including labels and a defined branch name, for example:
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Upgrade NPM packages with GH Actions
Unfortunately, due to security limitations, the automated PR that your new upgrade workflow generates will not have GH Actions checks run against it. See issue on the Create PR action discussing this.
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Create a PR to automatically fix code linting errors
To customize the workflow further, you can refer to this action.
What are some alternatives?
kaggle-badge - Add dynamically generated Kaggle Tier & Medals on your readme.
action-junit-report - Reports junit test results as GitHub Pull Request Check
telescope - A tool for tracking blogs in orbit around Seneca's open source involvement
n8n - Free and source-available fair-code licensed workflow automation tool. Easily automate tasks across different services.
react-frontend-quickstart - Starter template using React on a website's frontend - without Node
codestream - The Code Collaboration Tool Built for Remote Teams
node-project-template - Template for creating Node.js projects including docs and a deploy pipeline
github-pages-deploy-action - π Automatically deploy your project to GitHub Pages using GitHub Actions. This action can be configured to push your production-ready code into any branch you'd like.
vue-frontend-quickstart - Starter template for a Vue 3 site - without Node or a build step
test-reporter - Displays test results from popular testing frameworks directly in GitHub
documentalist - :memo: A sort-of-static site generator optimized for living documentation of software projects
action-update-file - Update (i.e. commit and push) files on GitHub