Github is more than a version control service, it's place where developer contributes to the Community. Github is the ultimate place where you'll find some amazing free and ultimate resources for everything, from eBook to tutorials to lectures to projects and more. I have gathered list of some of the amazing Github Repository you can't miss to bookmark.
Best-websites-a-programmer-should-visit
When learning CS, there are some useful sites you must know to get always informed to do your technologies even better and learn new things. Here is a non-exhaustive list of some sites you should visit. Contains: Articles, tutorials, jobs, eBooks, english improvement, podcasts and more.
Visit -> Best-websites-a-programmer-should-visit
- LakeFS
Git-like capabilities for your object storage
- gProfiler
It is a system-wide profiler, combining multiple sampling profilers to produce unified visualization of what your CPU is spending time on.
Big list of naughty strings
The Big List of Naughty Strings is an evolving list of strings which have a high probability of causing issues when used as user-input data. This is intended for use in helping both automated and manual QA testing; useful for whenever your QA engineer walks into a bar.
Visit -> Big list of naughty strings
Awesome talks
A curated list of screencasts, recordings of user group gatherings and conference talks available online.
Visit -> Awesome talks
the-book-of-secret-knowledge
This repository is a collection of various materials and tools that many people use every day in my work. It contains a lot of useful information gathered in one piece.
Visit -> the-book-of-secret-knowledge
coding-interview-university
This is my multi-month study plan for going from web developer (self-taught, no CS degree) to software engineer for a large company.
Visit -> coding-interview-university
Awesome
This is technically awesome. Front software development to hardware contains everything.
Visit -> Awesome
NodeJS Best practice
- this repository is a summary and curation of the top-ranked content on Node.js best practices, as well as content written here by collaborators.
Visit -> NodeJS Best practice
WTFjs
JavaScript is a great language. It has a simple syntax, large ecosystem and, what is most important, a great community.
At the same time, we all know that JavaScript is quite a funny language with tricky parts. Some of them can quickly turn our everyday job into hell, and some of them can make us laugh out loud.
Visit -> WTFjs
Real World
"The mother of all demo apps" β Exemplary fullstack Medium.com clone powered by React, Angular, Node, Django, and many more π
Visit -> Real World
Free For DEV
Developers and Open Source authors now have a massive amount of services offering free tiers, but it can be hard to find them all to make informed decisions.
This is a list of software (SaaS, PaaS, IaaS, etc.) and other offerings that have free tiers for developers.
Visit -> Free For DEV
The Algorithms/Python
All of the computer science algorithms implemented in Python.
Visit -> The Algorithms/Python
JavaScript Algorithms
This repository contains JavaScript based examples of many popular algorithms and data structures. Visit -> JavaScript Algorithms
Awesome Python
A curated list of awesome Python frameworks, libraries, software, and resources.
Visit -> Awesome Python
awesome-learning-resources
π₯ Awesome list of resources on Web Development.
Visit -> awesome-learning-resources
Tech Interview Handbook
Carefully curated content to help you ace your next technical interview, with a focus on algorithms. System design questions are in-progress. Besides the usual algorithm questions, other awesome stuffs.
Visit -> Tech Interview Handbook
Clean Code JavaScript
π Clean Code concepts adapted for JavaScript
Visit -> Clean Code JavaScript
Front-End-Checklist
The Front-End Checklist is an exhaustive list of all elements you need to have / to test before launching your website / HTML page to production.
Visit -> Front-End-Checklist
33 JavaScript Concepts
This repository was created with the intention of helping developers master their concepts in JavaScript. It is not a requirement, but a guide for future studies. It is based on an article written by Stephen Curtis.
Visit -> 33 JavaScript Concepts
Project guidelines
Here's a list of guidelines we've found, written and gathered that (we think) works really well with most JavaScript projects here at elsewhen.
Visit -> Project guidelines
30 Seconds of Code
Short JavaScript code snippets for all your development needs
Visit -> 30 Seconds of Code
How to secure anything
Security engineering is the discipline of building secure systems. Its lessons are not just applicable to computer security. In fact, in this repo, I aim to document a process for securing anything, whether it's a medieval castle, an art museum, or a computer network.
Visit -> How to secure anything
CSS ProTips
A collection of tips to help take your CSS skills pro.
Visit -> CSS ProTips
You Don't Know JavaScript
This is a series of books diving deep into the core mechanisms of the JavaScript language.
Visit -> You Don't Know JavaScript
Public APIs
A collective list of free APIs for use in software and web development.
Visit -> Public APIs
AirBnB JavaScript Guide
A mostly reasonable approach to JavaScript
Visit -> AirBnB JavaScript Guide
JavaScript Questions
From basic to advanced: test how well you know JavaScript, refresh your knowledge a bit, or prepare for your coding interview! πͺ π. Visit -> JavaScript Questions
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