I'm wondering if we can use Hashnode to organize a side project.
I think project scope should be small. Ideally something that can be started/finished by 10-20 contributors within a week's time.
Maybe the OpenMockup initiative may be interesting, i discovered in AngularCamp and i think it's very interesting :)
I think one good point it's to create an organization at github no?
WYSIWYG
This could be something very simple, like https://facebook.github.io/draft-js/, and could evolve into something very complex, like webflow.com.
Let's say you have something like Material UI react components. They have nice documentation, but what if you could drag and drop various components in order to nest them, and make composite components.
Add support for columns, some rich text editing, and bam, you're pretty close to mocking up entire web apps with an in browser UI.
And, it could be used to create simple content, like writing posts. If you've used weebly, SquareSpace, or a nice WordPress theme, you might have an idea what I'm talking about.
Content entry is still one of the holy grails of the web. Proof: why do so many sites use markdown?
Web Best Practices
There's Mozilla's docs, developers.google.com, webplatform.org, and millions of other resources, but the only way to really stay on top of everything is to be engaged in a never ending hunt for new blog posts, talks, etc.
Hashnode helps users share resources and ask questions, but there's still way too much information to sift through, and info becomes obsolete overnight.
I think it's pretty much accepted that the state of web development is in a state of constant change.
It'd be cool if there were a place you could go to:
This project would be infinitely better with a good content composer (either markdown, or a WYSIWYG). While markdown isn't the worst way to go, it's certainly not the best. I'm going to propose another project: a WYSIWYG
console.log wrapper library
I've been working on a library that makes console.log statements better via some nifty tricks (I'll have to explain later). I could use some help getting this on GitHub, get docs prepared, etc.
MERN git-powered tutorial
Have you ever done one of those git-based tutorials, where you "git checkout step-2" in order to proceed through the tutorial? I'm interested in learning this stack, and think one of these git-powered tutorials could really help.
An organization is basically a way yo group all the repors under a same "name", "group" or a few people. I think it's interesting for others people that can reach the roganization viewing all the projects :). The organization may be a Hashnoders or something similar. Here you have some explanations
Anthony Lapenna
Open-source enthusiast
Michael
Delevoper
I need help with my JavaScript framework. Anyone who finds themselves here might be interested. Here's the best description I have: reddit.com/r/javascript/comments/5nawo8/need_help…