Awesome GitHub
A curated list of GitHub’s awesomeness
Think GitHub is awesome? Contribute something to this list! It’s easy,
just have a look at the
contribution guidelines.
The awesomeness is currently organized into just a few different buckets:
What is the
Awesome GitHub
list? It’s a collection of things that make GitHub one of
the most amazing co-creation platforms in the world.
It is specifically focused on GitHub, and not on
Git. Git is indeed awesome. And there
would be no GitHub without Git. And yet, GitHub has become much more than
a home to much of humanity’s open-source code; it has become one of the
world’s most vivid examples of the power of mass collaboration.
All that to say, this list –
Awesome GitHub
– is an attempt to document that aspect of what is awesome: everything
that GitHub has become – far beyond what Git is today, and beyond where
GitHub started just eight years ago.
The inspiration for this list came from
a session proposal
for the
2015 Mozilla Festival. I
later learned, serendiptiously, that the Mozilla Festival itself was using
GitHub issues to manage the program
– reviewing proposals, assign sessions to tracks and themes, and much
more. Just one more example of how GitHub is being used to make awesome.
Infomation for people who are new to GitHub
-
Code School’s Try Git
- If you’d like to better understand Git, one of the technologys that
makes GitHub possible, this is a great place to start. No GitHub account
required.
-
Git-it – :computer:
:mortar_board: A workshopper for learning Git and GitHub.
-
On-Demand GitHub Training
- Self-paced, interactive projects created and maintained by GitHub’s
own Training team.
-
Bingo Board – Play
bingo :boom: by sending pull requests!
-
Writing on GitHub
- GitHub’s own guide to using GitHub for more than just software
development.
-
GitHubGuides -
GitHub Training & Guides on YouTube.
-
GitHub Pages - Websites for you
and your projects. Hosted directly from your GitHub repository. Just
edit, push, and your changes are live.
-
Filetypes that GitHub can do magic with:
-
GeoJSON/TopoJSON
- Instantly
render maps
when you add a GeoJSON file to a repository.
-
iPython/Jupyter
- Yes, that’s right, GitHub also renders
ipynb
files
right in the browser.
The possibilities are endless.
-
PDF - View
PDFs right in your browser.
-
STL files
- It’s pretty amazing, 3D right in the browser.
-
CSV - Data
journalists and civic data nerds rejoice, comma separated values
right in the browser!
-
SVG -
Not only can you view scalable vector graphics in the browser, but
you can see the difference between versions visually! You’ve got to
see it to believe it. (In fact,
you can do this with most image files.)
-
PSD -
That’s right, same idea as SVG, but for Photoshop files!
-
GitHub Government Community
- Information on joining GitHub’s
government community — a
collaborative community for sharing best practices in furtherance of
open source, open data, and open government efforts.
-
Classroom for GitHub - Your
course assignments on GitHub.
-
MOOC in Spanish -
Introductory course (MOOC) in Spanish from Madrid Polytechnical
University
Resources for those already familiar with GitHub
-
GitHub Cheat Sheet
- Use this list to test your GitHub knowledge.
-
GitHub Universe - Two full days
on how to build, collaborate, and deploy great software, presented by
GitHub. October 1 & 2, 2015, SF.
-
GitHub Desktop - Simple
collaboration from your desktop.
-
Atom -
Did you know that GitHub makes an editor? Use it to write, code, and
more.
-
Electron - Build cross platform
desktop apps with web technologies
-
GitHub Buttons - Showcase your GitHub
repo’s success with hotlinkable GitHub star, fork, or follow buttons.
-
Resume - Resumes generated using
GitHub.
-
Speaker Deck - Share
Presentations without the Mess, by GitHub.
-
Blocks - This is a simple viewer for
code examples hosted on GitHub Gist. (Introduction is
here)
-
Block Builder - Quickly create,
edit, and fork D3.js examples
-
GitHub Template Guidelines
- Guidelines for creating template files for a GitHub project..
-
Pull Dog - Automatic test
environments for your pull requests.
-
GitHub Integrations Directory
- Use your favorite tools with GitHub.
-
GitHub Cheat Sheet
- Use this list to test your GitHub knowledge. (A resource so good, it’s
worth mentioning twice.)
-
A collection of awesome browser extensions for GitHub.
- Well, the link kinda’ says it all.
-
Gitter - Chat, for GitHub. Unlimited
public rooms and one-to-one chats, free.
-
Zenhub - Project management inside
of GitHub, including kanban boards and more.
-
HuBoard - Instant project management
for your GitHub issues (sadly, no free plan, but appears to be
open source)
-
Overv.io - Agile project management for
teams who love GitHub. Kanban baords and more.
-
Penflip - Collaborative writing
and version control, powered by GitLab (similar to GitHub).
-
Gitbook - A modern publishing
toolchain. Simply taking you from ideas to finished, polished books.
-
Prose - Prose provides a
beautifully simple content authoring environment for
CMS-free websites. It’s a web-based interface for managing content on GitHub.
-
Redliner - A tool
for facilitating the redlining of documents with the GitHub uninitiated.
-
Gatekeeper - Enables
client-side applications to dance OAuth with GitHub.
-
github-secret-keeper
- Microservice to enable GitHub login for multiple server-less
applications.
-
Hub - A command line tool
that wraps git in order to extend it with extra features and commands
that make working with GitHub easier.
-
Ghizmo - A command line
for GitHub, allowing access to all APIs.
-
cli-github -
Github made pretty, within the command line.
-
GitHub Dark -
A sophisticated dark theme for GitHub.
-
github-issues-import
- A Python script that allows you to import issues and pull requests
from one GitHub repository to another
-
Github-Auto-Issue-Creator
- A Python script that searches a GitHub repository (locally) and
automatically creates GitHub issues for TODO statements, keeping them
tracked.
-
Problem Child -
Allows authenticated or anonymous users to fill out a standard web form
to create GitHub issues (and pull requests).
-
gitify - All your GitHub notifications
on your menu.
-
HubPress - A web
application to build your Blog on GitHub
-
TinyPress - TinyPress
is the easiest way to publish a blog on GitHub.
-
Issue and Pull Request Template Generator
- Generate templates customized to your project, with the help of
Cthulhu and Lewis Carroll
-
Noteit - Manage your
notes at CLI with GitHub Gists.
-
Zappr - A
free/open-source GitHub integration that removes bottlenecks around pull
request approval and helps dev teams to painlessly abide by compliance
requirements.
-
Migrating to Git LFS
- Easily manage huge files in your Git projects, useful for Data Science
projects
-
Gitential.com - Measure and
visualize coding hours, productivity, efficiency of projects, teams,
repos or individual developers.
-
Octotree - Browser extension that
enhances GitHub code browsing and pull request reviewing. Available on
Chrome, Firefox, Opera and Safari.
-
FeatHub - Feature voting for GitHub.
-
multi-gitter -
Update multiple repositories in bulk.
Novel uses of GitHub