I've selected nbconvert, jupyter-book and repo2docker as three specific
repositories to point people to - all three have a decent crop of 'good
first issues'. Jess Hamrick will be there too, so nbgrader is also
definitely on the menu. Finally, I might suggest people work on the ongoing
effort to
No problem! Also just a note that I believe many of the JupyterHub
repositories (at the least, jupyterhub/binderhub, jupyter/repo2docker, and
jupyterhub/the-littlest-jupyterhub) should have "good first issue" tags on
them as well as a few "hacktoberfest" tags. Those should be nice places to
look
Thanks Chris & Jason.
Chris: good idea about asking the Turing Institute team. I've met them
before at one of the Jupyterhub workshops, so I'll try dropping them a line.
On Wed, 16 Oct 2019 at 22:27, Jason Grout wrote:
> We try to curate a list of "good first issues" in JupyterLab that might
We try to curate a list of "good first issues" in JupyterLab that might be
good for people that want to do stuff in JS/Typescript:
https://github.com/jupyterlab/jupyterlab/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3A%22good+first+issue%22
There's also a curated list of good first issues in ipywidgets:
Hi all,
I've said I'll run a Jupyter-related sprint at a Hackathon being organised
in London in a couple of weeks (https://www.man.com/hackathon2019 ). I'm
not as familiar with Jupyter development as I used to be, so briefly: are
there any Jupyter projects, or Jupyter-related projects, with a