plots2
Rubocop
Our great sponsors
plots2 | Rubocop | |
---|---|---|
6 | 7 | |
952 | 11,323 | |
0.2% | - | |
0.0 | 9.8 | |
about 2 months ago | about 3 years ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
plots2
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Ask HN: Comment here about whatever you're passionate about at the moment
Citizen science! It's great when people realize they can answer their own questions with observation and data, and for activism because data is a powerful story. One friend of mine started https://publiclab.org to feed this, and another is doing data journalism to highlight holes in the government's environmental data. https://www.muckrock.com/project/
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A step-by-step for doing your first open source contribution (and finding where to do it)
My first contribution ever was to PublicLab's plots2 back in 2018. I had no idea what I was doing or what plots2 was. What attracted me was how welcoming they were (and still are) to first time contributors. With them: I opened my first PR, discussed in PR's conversation, and pushed the changes requested. Back then, that was a lot!
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Search function on a website I'm getting built
Hmm so to your first question: That pattern of selecting from a pre-populated list is often used with a tag or chip system where you can select and deselect one or more items from the list, something like this: https://github.com/publiclab/plots2/issues/6026 in this case the search CTA acts as the final decision to search while the selections are populating the search criteria. It sounds your system design is a bit different though. Sounds to me like an issue of heuristics of UI https://www.nngroup.com/articles/ten-usability-heuristics/ the third heuristic states:
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Are there places for amateur researcher to post their work?
Maybe public lab would be a good home? https://publiclab.org/
- what ruby or rails open source projects a beginner-to-intermediate developer can easily contribute to?
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Hacktoberfest: 69 Beginner-Friendly Projects You Can Contribute To
https://github.com/publiclab/plots2 A collaborative knowledge-exchange platform in Rails; we welcome first-time contributors! balloon
Rubocop
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What’s your day to day development env set up?
Parenthesis are mostly optional in Ruby, Seattle style takes it to an extreme where you omit any character not required for the code to run. https://github.com/rubocop-hq/rubocop/issues/4793
- Mais de 10 coisas para fazer antes de solicitar revisão do seu Pull Request
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RuboCop Turns 10
No, it's not?! The latest version is 1.28.2: https://rubygems.org/gems/rubocop
- what ruby or rails open source projects a beginner-to-intermediate developer can easily contribute to?
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Refactoring in Ruby
Running rubocop might give you a few tips regarding naming conventions and best practices
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Beginner's guide to JavaScript static code analysis
Every language that I’ve ever worked in has a linter written for it. JavaScript has ESLint; Python has Black, and Ruby has RuboCop. These linters do the simple job of making sure your code follows the prescribed set of style rules. A few linters like RuboCop also enforce good practices such as atomic functions and better variable names. Such hints are very often helpful in detecting and fixing bugs before they cause issues in production.
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Racism is no more...
It's like rubocop problem: https://github.com/rubocop-hq/rubocop/issues/8091
What are some alternatives?
ArchivesSpace - The ArchivesSpace archives management tool
Rubycritic - A Ruby code quality reporter
matplotlib - matplotlib: plotting with Python
Reek - Code smell detector for Ruby
WebsiteOne - A website for Agile Ventures
Brakeman - A static analysis security vulnerability scanner for Ruby on Rails applications
textbook-curriculum - Ada Developers Academy Online Curriculum
Pronto - Quick automated code review of your changes
export-pull-requests - Export pull requests and/or issues to a CSV file. Supports GitHub, GitLab, and Bitbucket
rails_best_practices - a code metric tool for rails projects
classroom - GitHub Classroom automates repository creation and access control, making it easy for teachers to distribute starter code and collect assignments on GitHub.
SimpleCov - Code coverage for Ruby with a powerful configuration library and automatic merging of coverage across test suites