retext-equality
contributor_covenant

retext-equality | contributor_covenant | |
---|---|---|
3 | 18 | |
159 | 1,969 | |
0.0% | 1.0% | |
6.2 | 6.9 | |
9 months ago | 2 months ago | |
JavaScript | CSS | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
retext-equality
- Joblint – Test tech job posts for issues
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Detect Non-Inclusive Language with Retext and Node.js
alex is a lovely command-line tool that takes in text or markdown files and, using retext-equality and retext-profanities, highlights suggestions for improvement. alex checks for gendered work titles, gendered proverbs, ableist language, condescending or intolerant language, profanities, and much more.
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Research survey - promoting respectful terminology to refer people with disabilities
Check out https://github.com/retextjs/retext-equality
contributor_covenant
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Building a Thriving Open Source Community: Strategies for Engagement
Foster an Inclusive Environment Inclusivity is crucial for building a diverse community. Implementing a Code of Conduct ensures a respectful and welcoming environment for all contributors, encouraging participation from varied backgrounds.
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Code of Conduct Toolkit for Open Source Communities
A good place to start is the Contributor Covenant, licensed CC BY 4.0. Several Open Source communities use this as a starting point for their codes of conduct.
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Qilin: A Starter Project Template For Every Open Source Project
While you are free to write your own or adopt one from another repository, project, or organization you respect, there exists a code of conduct written and maintained by the community known as the Contributor Covenant.
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Get People Interested in Contributing to Your Open Project
Many Open Source projects have adopted the Contributor Covenant as their code of conduct. Check this page to see a list of adopters.
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Hyprland Is a Toxic Community
https://www.contributor-covenant.org/ is (was?) the most widely adopted code of conduct in FOSS, initially drafted by a Ruby contributor, who also happens to be transgender if that's pertinent information to you. It's the genesis seed from which all this code of conduct madness stems from. Personally I'd stick with "be excellent to each other" or "say what you want, just don't insult other contributors" or something vague, ambiguous and universally understood as that. I'm not really a fan of rigorous social rules, so my view on this starts from that position.
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Setting up your GitHub Repository for Open Source Development
You can adapt the guidelines provided by https://www.contributor-covenant.org/ to create your guideline.
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PrismLauncher (the replacement for PolyMC) is now on flathub
The Contributor Covenant that the maintainer removed to "reclaim polymc from the leftoids" was added in February: https://github.com/PolyMC/PolyMC/pull/178. You can view a list of other communities that have adopted the covenant on their website.
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What's going on with PolyMC being declared compromised?
For reference, the Code of Conduct they used is basically the same as this one: https://www.contributor-covenant.org/
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cppfront: meta
Please follow the Contributor Covenant
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How to Open Source Your Project
As your audience grows, it is vital that you define clear rules to create a safe environment for everyone to participate. A common way of doing this is to define a code of conduct (CoC), which sets some basic guidelines on what kind of community interaction will not be tolerated. We decided to stick to well-established frameworks and based our CoC on the Contributor Covenant.
What are some alternatives?
retext-profanities - plugin to check for profane and vulgar wording
cortx - CORTX Community Object Storage is 100% open source object storage uniquely optimized for mass capacity storage devices.
stemmer - Fast Porter stemmer implementation
terminology - A configuration file for in-solidarity-bot that flags some of the terms in the NIST Technical Series Publications Author Instructions and the IETF's list of problematic terminology.
retext - natural language processor powered by plugins part of the @unifiedjs collective
terminology - The best terminal emulator based on the Enlightenment Foundation Libraries
joblint - Test tech job posts for issues with sexism, culture, expectations, and recruiter fails.
stackrox - The StackRox Kubernetes Security Platform performs a risk analysis of the container environment, delivers visibility and runtime alerts, and provides recommendations to proactively improve security by hardening the environment.
retext-readability - plugin to check readability
OpenSourceLawExperiment - Config files for my GitHub profile.
go-cmp - Package for comparing Go values in tests
pulseaudio-modules-bt - [Deprecated, see https://github.com/EHfive/pulseaudio-modules-bt/issues/154] Adds Sony LDAC, aptX, aptX HD, AAC codecs (A2DP Audio) support to PulseAudio on Linux
