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Github Pulse Github Pulse Release 0.3.10

Github Pulse is an app to help you keep your streaks, making a commit every day.

It shows a graph of your last month commits and how long is your current streak. Its icon also turns red if you haven't committed today yet, and by the end of the afternoon it'll remind you once, in case you still haven't committed.

Screenshot 1 Screenshot 2 Screenshot 3

Installation

Right now it is available for OSX and Google Chrome

For OSX you can just download it here, unzip and copy to your applications folder.

The Google Chrome Extension is available on the Chrome Web Store and if, for any reason, you want to download directly, it's also available here

What's being used

The OSX application has a small shell of native code, written in Swift and renders a React app (using JSX) on a WebView and uses window.location redirects to communicate with the native app.

The same react code is used for the Chrome Extension, just replacing the storage helpers and background workers.

3rd party libraries (Front)

Pods

Building it locally

As mentioned above I'm using Swift and React, so you'll need to have XCode 6+, Node and CocoaPods already installed in order to build.

To get started:

Debug building

The debug build points the WebView to webpack-dev-server's default address: localhost:8080, so in order to get it running

Release building

NOTICE: If you just cloned the repo and wants make it, you'll have to open the file widget/GithubPulse.xcworkspace on XCode at least once for the build to succeed.

Just run $ make osx and the file GithubPulse.zip will be placed inside the dist directory.

Chrome Extension

There actually is a target on the root Makefile called chrome but it won't work, because the private key is, well... private.

But you can still build the front end and load the unpacked extensions. Here is how:

Credits and Motivation

I really believe committing every day on an open source project is the best practice a developer can keep, so I made this project to show my love to Github and make I sure I never miss a commit! :D