Skip to content

Great for new contributors

These projects have a history and reputation for being welcoming to new open source contributors. Have you had a great experience as a new contributor on an open source project? We'd love to hear about it!

14 repositories 6 languages Last updated Apr 16, 2021
  • @hoodiehq

    hoodiehq / hoodie

    Hoodie lets web developers build applications without worrying about a backend.

    You can contribute in a number of ways both online and offline: documentation and triage, workshops and meetups, talks and blog posts, and writing code to help improve the Hoodie server itself. You can also build plugins to extend its features.

    Check out the contributing documentation and find prepared issues on hoodie.camp.

    JavaScript 4,393 459 Updated Feb 29, 2024
  • @HospitalRun

    HospitalRun / hospitalrun-frontend

    HospitalRun is a beautiful, easy-to-use hospital management system built for developing world hospitals. The system is a full hospital information system and handles both patient care and the business of running a hospital. Due to the challenges of connectivity in some of the places where these hospitals are located, an important goal of the application is making it work just as well offline as online.

    Read more about the inspiring history of HospitalRun and about how to contribute.

    TypeScript 6,798 2,167 Updated Jan 9, 2023
  • @rust-lang

    rust-lang / rust

    Rust is a systems programming language that is famous for—and takes great pride in—being fast and safe.

    As with all programming languages, Rust needs help with much more than writing parsers and compilers and a standard library. The community is an important part of growing the adoption of a language: mentoring, speaking at conferences and meetups, helping out with workshops, and writing documentation and tutorials. Check out their community page for more information about how you can get involved.

    Rust 93,692 12,054 Updated May 23, 2024
  • @howdyai

    howdyai / botkit

    Botkit is a framework for designing and developing useful, creative bots for messaging platforms like Slack, Facebook Messenger, and the Microsoft Bot Framework.

    If you've got skills in JavaScript and Node.js, check out the open issues and the contributing guide.

    TypeScript 11,352 2,286 Updated Mar 12, 2024
  • @moby

    moby / moby

    Docker is a containerization platform. It is a way to enable developers and sysadmins to build, ship, and run distributed applications and microservices by standardizing
    environments and eliminating inconsistencies and busywork.

    The project has a huge online and offline community, and there are many opportunities to contribute to both the project itself (issue triage, code, documentation, tests) and the community (mentorship, support, speaking, writing).

    Go 67,845 18,556 Updated May 23, 2024
  • @exercism

    exercism / exercism

    Exercism is a platform where experienced and aspiring programmers can quickly ramp up their fluency in the basics of a new programming language. The project supports over 30 languages, with support for new languages added on a regular basis.

    The easiest place to begin contributing to Exercism is the curriculum, since each programming language has its own stand-alone repository, and each exercise is isolated from the others.

    Read more about how to contribute to the Exercism programming language tracks.

    7,272 1,024 Updated Mar 1, 2024
  • @atom

    atom / atom

    Atom is a modern, hackable text editor built with web technologies like JavaScript, HTML and CSS. It ships with a menagerie of packages and themes, along with a package manager to let you handle it all seamlessly.

    If you want to get involved, check out Making Your First Contribution on the Atom blog.

    JavaScript 60,004 17,376 Updated Jan 3, 2023
  • @beeware

    beeware / batavia

    Batavia is part of the larger BeeWare project, which aims to make it easy for Python developers of all skill levels to develop rich, native user interfaces. Batavia is the software that lets you run Python bytecode in your browser. So it's Python, but it's also JavaScript.

    Batavia has documentation for first time contributors, as well as a contributing guide aimed at more seasoned hands.

    JavaScript 1,395 426 Updated May 31, 2020
  • @django

    django / django

    Django describes itself as the Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines. It's a high-level Web framework in Python with a focus on speed, scalability, and security. Django has a rich ecosystem with thousands of packages and projects.

    To start contributing, find a sprint happening near you, or check out the contributing documentation and find the community online.

    Python 77,213 31,019 Updated May 23, 2024
  • @nodejs

    nodejs / node

    Node.js is a runtime built on Chrome's V8 JavaScript engine, bringing the most common frontend language to the backend.

    There are many ways to get involved by contributing to both the code itself, the ecosystem, or the broader Node.js community.

    The Node.js community runs a series of live events to help people get started contributing.

    JavaScript 104,370 28,099 Updated May 23, 2024
  • @Homebrew

    Homebrew / brew

    Homebrew installs open-source software and other applications on macOS. If you're a developer using a Mac, you may well have used this software.

    Development happens in Ruby with a smattering of Bash and troubleshooting in any variety of programming languages that Homebrew's formulas rely on.

    The best places to get started are the contributing guide and issues labeled "help wanted"

    Ruby 39,669 9,295 Updated May 23, 2024
  • @middleman

    middleman / middleman

    Middleman is a static site generator built in Ruby. The beauty of static sites is that they're blazingly fast and easy to deploy. The other beauty of static sites is that they always need frontend developers who can help make gorgeous templates for people to use. Middleman also has a rich extension ecosystem, which always needs contributors.

    Take a look at their community page to start contributing.

    Ruby 7,024 747 Updated May 16, 2024
  • @zulip

    zulip / zulip

    Zulip is a powerful, open source group chat application that combines the immediacy of real-time chat with the productivity benefits of threaded conversations. Zulip is used by open source projects, Fortune 500 companies, large standards bodies, and others who need a real-time chat system that allows users to easily process hundreds or thousands of messages a day. With over 700 contributors merging over 500 commits a month, Zulip is also the largest and fastest growing open source group chat project.

    Check out our guide for new contributors to get started. Zulip prides itself on maintaining a clean and well-tested codebase, and a stock of hundreds of beginner-friendly issues.

    Python 20,186 7,455 Updated May 23, 2024
  • @OperationCode

    OperationCode / START_HERE

    Operation Code is a non-profit on a mission to get active military, citizen-soldiers, veterans and their families coding and building software. Thanks to their efforts, a number of code schools and developer training programs are now covered by the GI Bill.

    They run a fellowship program, a mentorship program, and a scholarship program.

    To get started contributing to the project, take a look at the Start Here Repo. And if you have other skills, they could also use help with mentoring, fundraising, PR/branding, and grant writing. You will find beginner friendly Issues labeled in their repos.

    340 83 Updated Oct 1, 2023
Sign up for free Get involved with these projects and more.

Already have an account? Sign in now