iplib3
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iplib3 | CodeTriage | |
---|---|---|
31 | 80 | |
11 | 1,377 | |
- | 0.7% | |
8.7 | 7.4 | |
10 days ago | 4 months ago | |
Python | Ruby | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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iplib3
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Blackjack project review
Instead of keeping all the code at the repository root, maybe consider a more traditional project structure. As far as examples go, I've got this for an executable, and I think this works for a more complex project.
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Relative importing from another directory. No known parent package.
What that means in practice, I have yet to figure out how to explain in the simplest way possible, but perhaps an example repository might help somewhat. The details more or less boil down to
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A tip I just taught myself
First, some values simply never change. For example, my iplib3 has plenty of hard-coded constants set by the IPv4 and IPv6 specifications and there's no need to have those in some external config file because, again, unless the standard gets updated those are constant.
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I’ve been struggling with organizing projects and utilizing classes so I’ve been looking for public projects I can study
I haven't touched this codebase in a while (although I really should), but it serves as one of my better examples for object-oriented programming. It's reasonably large, yet meticulously linted: https://github.com/Diapolo10/iplib3
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Help with importing custom packages
I don't have any projects using setuptools anymore so unfortunately I can't give an example for that, but if Poetry is fine then iplib3 will probably suffice. Focus on the imports and the project structure, and maybe pyproject.toml, everything else is just noise.
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Begginer learning Python
Well, my GitHub profile is part of my flair in this subreddit, feel free to dig around. My latest project was an attempt to port the ms JavaScript library to Python, and I think I did alright. Other things I can highlight would be my iplib3 package, a server implementation for the EguiValet messaging service, and finally I've got a fairly unfinished text colouring utility called escapyde.
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Suggest me so GitHub repositories
And iplib3 could use some cleanup, such as redesigning the inheritance to add support for seamless conversion between all supported types. The documentation should also be written as right now there's basically nothing.
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Casino Craps Game - Code critique and project help
You could maybe take a look at my iplib3 project for some examples. Alternatively, the EguiValet server project should be fine too.
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Are there some rules that state how code for python module should look like?
While I have a very recent project that would otherwise be a perfect example, it does something a bit unusual with imports so I'll instead use iplib3 as an example, even though I haven't had time to work on it lately.
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How to write 'helloworld'-level unit tests?
The Pytest documentation does a much better job at explaining how this works in practice than I ever could. I don't have any super simple example repositories, but iplib3 might work: https://github.com/Diapolo10/iplib3/blob/main/tests/test_address.py
CodeTriage
- Ask HN: Anyone looking for contributors for their open source projects
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💼 50 Tips to Land a Remote Tech Job Based on My 45-Day Journey to 2 Offers
3. Open Source Contribution
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Docs Deserve More Respect
I wrote a book with a chapter on how to write docs for other people’s code https://howtoopensource.dev
I also wrote an open source tool for writing and testing tutorials https://github.com/zombocom/rundoc and another that will email you undocumented methods of open source code so you can practice writing documentation https://www.codetriage.com/.
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Where to Find Open Source Projects for Contribution?
CodeTriage helps you contribute to open source by “picking a handful of open issues and delivering them directly to your inbox”. (Source: CodeTriage)
- Ask HN: What’s the best way to start contributing to Open Source?
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Idea for project for intermediate c developper
Here are open source projects listed https://www.codetriage.com/ You can filter for "C".
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Cookpad to discontinue Ruby interpreter development - let's help Koichi and Mame land a new job or support them via GH sponsors
The biggest untaped potential (IMHO) is not one company funding 1 full time maintainer, but EVERY company allowing and encouraging EVERY developer to help and work with open source. This was the basis of my web app https://www.codetriage.com/. I have a chapter on it in my book How to Open Source (https://howtoopensource.dev/), and I talked to Yehuda about it for about an hour after my last talk at Philly ETE.
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What do i do to become hireable?
You can also use websites like up-for-grabs, goodfirstissue, or CodeTriage to find projects with open issues. Find one that looks easy or interesting to you and comment on it, asking if you can take a shot at it.
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Student looking to contribute to open source
I recommend these resources to help you contribute https://www.codetriage.com/ (free) and https://howtoopensource.dev/ (paid). DM if you can’t afford a copy.
- Are there any open source projects on Github that a person can get involved in if they want to start helping with coding projects? I was thinking if a person wanted to get some credit for coding something that actually got implemented in a project?
What are some alternatives?
pytricia - A library for fast IP address lookup in Python.
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awesome-for-beginners - A list of awesome beginners-friendly projects.
python-ms - A Python equivalent to the JavaScript ms package
htop - htop - an interactive process viewer
5G00EV25-3001_server - The server side of the course communication system project
good-first-issue - Make your first open-source contribution.
5G00EV25-3001_client - The client side of the course communication system project
Open-Source-Ruby-and-Rails-Apps - Awesome Ruby and Rails Open Source applications 🌈