HacktoberFest Hello World in every other language ever.
Just fork it and add a 'Hello World'
program to contribute for hacktober fest and send a Pull Request!!
Say hi to the world in any language of your choice!
Hacktoberfest is a program by Digital Ocean, DEV and Github, where you can easily win a T-Shirt just by making 4 pull requests in the month of October to any open source projects on Github.
https://hacktoberfest.digitalocean.com/
You can get your own fork/copy of Hacktoberfest by using the Fork button or clicking this.
Once you have forked the repo, add your progam in the language folder in main branch, if there is no language folder, make one, then add into it. You can take a look to the Programming Language List in Wikipedia to create a new one for Hacktoberfest!
Once you have completed these steps, you are ready to start contributing
by checking our Help Wanted
issues and creating pull requests.
If you liked working on this repo, please share this repo as much as you can and star this repo to help as many people in opensource as you can.
To make your own local copy of the repository you would like to contribute to, let’s first open up a terminal window.
We’ll use the git clone
command along with the URL that points to your fork of the repository.
This URL will be similar to the URL above, except now it will end with .git
. In the cloud_haiku example above, the URL will look like this:
https://github.com/your-username/Hacktoberfest.git
You can alternatively copy the URL by using the green “Clone or download” button from your repository page that you just forked from the original repository page. Once you click the button, you’ll be able to copy the URL by clicking the binder button next to the URL:
Once we have the URL, we’re ready to clone the repository. To do this, we’ll combine the git clone
command with the repository URL from the command line in a terminal window:
git clone https://github.com/your-username/Hacktoberfest.git
To create your branch, from your terminal window, change your directory so that you are working in the directory of the repository. Be sure to use the actual name of the repository (i.e. Hacktoberfest) to change into that directory.
cd Hacktoberfest
Now, we’ll create our new branch with the git branch
command. Make sure you name it descriptively so that others working on the project understand what you are working on.
git branch new-branch
Now that our new branch is created, we can switch to make sure that we are working on that branch by using the git checkout command:
git checkout new-branch
Once you enter the git checkout command, you will receive the following output:
Output:
Switched to branch 'new-branch'
At this point, you can now modify existing files or add new files to the project on your own branch.
Once you have modified existing files or added new files to the project, you can add them to your local repository, which you can do with the git add
command. Let’s add the -A
flag to add all changes that we have made:
git add -A
or
git add .
Next, we’ll want to record the changes that we made to the repository with the git commit command.
The commit message is an important aspect of your code contribution; it helps the other contributors fully understand the change you have made, why you made it, and how significant it is. Additionally, commit messages provide a historical record of the changes for the project at large, helping future contributors along the way.
If you have a very short message, you can record that with the -m
flag and the message in quotes:
Example:
git commit -m "Updated Readme.md"
At this point you can use the git push
command to push the changes to the current branch of your forked repository:
Example:
git push --set-upstream origin new-branch
While you are working on a project alongside other contributors, it is important for you to keep your local repository up-to-date with the project as you don’t want to make a pull request for code that will cause conflicts. To keep your local copy of the code base updated, you’ll need to sync changes.
We’ll first go over configuring a remote for the fork, then syncing the fork.
Next, you’ll have to specify a new remote upstream repository for us to sync with the fork. This will be the original repository that you forked from. You’ll have to do this with the git remote add
command.
git remote add upstream https://github.com/shivaylamba/Hacktoberfest.git
In this example, upstream
is the shortname we have supplied for the remote repository since in terms of Git, “upstream” refers to the repository that you cloned from. If you want to add a remote pointer to the repository of a collaborator, you may want to provide that collaborator’s username or a shortened nickname for the shortname.
Once you have configured a remote that references the upstream and original repository on GitHub, you are ready to sync your fork of the repository to keep it up-to-date.
To sync your fork, from the directory of your local repository in a terminal window, you’ll have to use the git fetch
command to fetch the branches along with their respective commits from the upstream repository. Since you used the shortname “upstream” to refer to the upstream repository, you’ll have to pass that to the command:
git fetch upstream
Switch to the local master branch of our repository:
git checkout master
You’ll now have to merge any changes that were made in the original repository’s master branch, that you will access through your local upstream/master branch, with your local master branch:
git merge upstream/master
At this point, you are ready to make a pull request to the original repository.
You should navigate to your forked repository, and press the “New pull request” button on your left-hand side of the page.
You can add references to some cool open source projects below:
1. Zulip -
Zulip is 100% open source software, built by a vibrant community of hundreds of developers from all around the world.
2. FOSSASIA -
Developing Open Source Software and Hardware to improve people's lives.
3. MOZILLA -
This technology could fall into the right hands. Mozilla has 30 repositories available. Follow their code on GitHub.
4. Free code camp -
Learn to code for free with millions of other people round the world.
List of Data Structures and Algorithms
6. Habitica -
App that lets users gamify real-life choices and activity with in-app rewards .
Learn to code for free with millions of other people around the world.
7. REACT -
A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces. Plenty resource to learn. (official)
8. ELECTRON -
Build cross-platform desktop apps with JavaScript, HTML, and CSS. Plenty Resource to learn and contribute. (official)
9. Killed by Google -
A tribute and log of beloved products and services killed by Google. This is a fun open source project that encourages contributors for Hacktoberfest!
10. issuehub.io -
A website which helps you find projects/issues based on your required language or issue labels.
11. Code Triage -
Another useful tool for searching issues to fix
12. Up For Grabs -
List of projects with issues that can be resolved by beginners
13. First Timers Only -
A list of issues that are labelled “first-timers-only”.
14. Awesome First Timers PR -
A list of awesome beginners-friendly projects.
15. Tensor Flow -
TensorFlow is an open-source software library for dataflow programming across a range of tasks. It is a symbolic math library, and is also used for machine learning applications such as neural networks.
16. Kubernetes -
An open source container system for automating deployment , scaling and management of containers application.
17. DuckDuckGo -
DuckDuckGo is a privacy-conscious search engine that doesn't track users. Instant Answers is a feature that provides answers without needing to open up a website..
18. Polymer -
An open-source JavaScript library for creating web components which are then used to build web pages and apps, Polymer is currently being developed by Google developers and contributors on GitHub. Central to a wide range of Google services and websites, including YouTube, Google Earth and Google Sites, Polymer received an update in January (Polymer 2.4) which is paving the way for 3.0 and TypeScript support.
19. Blender -
Blender is the free and open source 3D creation suite. It supports the entirety of the 3D pipeline—modeling, rigging, animation, simulation, rendering, compositing and motion tracking, even video editing and game creation.
20. sagemath -
SageMath is a computer algebra system with features covering many aspects of mathematics, including algebra, combinatorics, graph theory, numerical analysis, number theory, calculus and statistics. It builds on top of many existing open-source packages: NumPy, SciPy, matplotlib, Sympy, Maxima, GAP, FLINT, R and many more.
21. Material Ocean
Material Ocean is a theme for various Applications based on a blueish ocean color scheme
A starter project for Ruby On Sinatra web app projects to introduce programmers to Ruby programming. Link to Live Application HERE
23. Flutter
Flutter is Google’s UI toolkit for building beautiful, natively compiled applications for mobile, web, and desktop from a single codebase.
An open source Study guide and introduction to the modern front end stack created by Grab.
25. LibreOffice
LibreOffice is a free and open-source office suite, a project of The Document Foundation. LibreOffice uses the international ISO/IEC standard OpenDocument file format (ODF).
The Roulette game was to control the animation ball stop number. This project was write and using library PixiJs. This is just for fun.
25. Uber Open Source
Uber open source project info