- Hacktoberfest is a month-long challenge. It happens every year in the month of October.
- Hacktoberfest is open to everyone and it marks the celebration of Open Source. It's the biggest Open Source event that encourages newbies to participate in Open Source and create their 1st meaningful PR.
- Hacktoberfest will be hosted by Digital Ocean for the 8th year in a row in partnership with GitHub and other companies.
- Hacktoberfest® is open to everyone in our global community. Whether you’re a developer, student learning to code, event host, or company of any size, you can help drive growth of open source and make positive contributions to an ever-growing community.
- All backgrounds and skill levels are encouraged to complete the challenge.
- Hacktoberfest is a celebration open to everyone in our global community.
- You can sign up anytime between October 1 and October 31.
Create a GitHub account, if you don't already have one.
Register for Hacktoberfest: Navigate to the Hacktoberfest registration page and follow the instructions. But, read the rules carefully before you do and then sign In using your GitHub credentials.
Find good projects worth contributing on the GitHub page. You can type label:hactoberfest is:issue is:open
You can add a language label of your choice to filter open issues. If you are a beginner and can’t find good issues then there’s tag label:good first issue
which filters out issues for beginners who want to contribute.
Submit PRs: Try and submit at least 4 PRs and wait for it to be verified. Make sure to submit quality PRs.
- To earn your Hacktoberfest tee or tree reward, you must register and make four valid pull requests (PRs) between October 1-31 (in any time zone).
- Pull requests can be made in any participating GitHub or GitLab hosted repository/project. Look for the
hacktoberfest
topic to know if a repository/project is participating in Hacktoberfest. - Pull requests must be approved by a maintainer of the repository/project to count.
- If a maintainer reports your pull request as spam or behavior not in line with the project’s code of conduct, you will be ineligible to participate.
- This year, the first 55,000 participants who successfully complete the challenge will be eligible to receive a prize.
For your PR to count it must be:
- Submitted in a public repo, AND the PR is labelled as
hacktoberfest-accepted
by a maintainer. or - Submitted in a repo labelled
hacktoberfest
, AND Merged, OR Approved - You can opt not to receive a t-shirt and stickers and you can choose to have a tree planted in your name and help make Hacktoberfest 2021 more carbon neutral.
Whether it’s your first or fiftieth pull request, there’s always more to learn! We’ve put together a few resources that can help you create quality pull requests, keep your repositories pristine, and build on your open source knowledge.
A place where you can find and learn the copious number of algorithms in an efficient manner. This repository covers problems of Arrays, Stacks, Queues, Trees, Graphs and different other Algorithms. An attempt to collect solutions for basic Data Structure and Algorithm problems across various platforms in different language in a single repo.
- You can write solutions in C/C++/Java for Data Structure and Algorithms.
- Follow file naming convention for all your pull requests.
- While adding any content it should be inside its appropiate directory
- if there is any problem with inaccurate solution create an issue!
- Repo contain folders of some basic data structures and algorithms topics. You can add an implementation to a topic that is unanswered.
- You can update existing implementation with a better one ( better complexity).
- Participants can even add new questions and solutions of their interest.
- Solve issues raised by other people or yourself.
- Well-documented source code with detailed explanations provides a valuable resource for educators and students alike.
1. Fork this repo
2. Star this repo
3. Add a file ( txt/cpp ) inside appropriate folder
4. commit the code
5. Make pull request
- Beginner-friendly
- Targeted for developers, and programming students.
- Would also help participants who are not familiar with development but are eager to participate in open source.