Track Helper is a simple command-line tool to generate daily progress reports for your projects using OpenAI's GPT-3 language model.
To use Track Helper, you will need the following:
- Node.js installed on your machine
- An OpenAI API key
-
Clone the repository to your local machine.
-
Run
npm install
to install all the required dependencies. -
Create a
.env
file in the root of the project and add your OpenAI API key to it in the following format:OPENAI_API_KEY='your_api_key_here'
You can find your OpenAI API key on the OpenAI dashboard.
In order for the track.sh
script to correctly locate your Git repositories, make sure that your repositories are all located in a single parent directory. For example, you might create a directory called repos
and place all of your Git repositories inside that directory. The track.sh
script will search for repositories in the repos
directory, so make sure that all of your repositories are located there in order for the script to function properly.
If you want to use a different parent directory for your repositories, you can modify the REPOS_DIR
variable in the track.sh
script to point to the correct directory path.
To use Track Helper, run the following command:
npm start
Track Helper will generate daily progress reports for all the repositories you have worked on since the last time you ran the command. The progress reports will be saved in a text file in the logs
directory, and the file will be opened automatically.
===================track-helper====================
🐛 Fix:
- Readme.md: Add quotes around the OpenAI API key in the .env file example
✨ Feature:
- .env.example: Add OPENAI_API_KEY environment variable example
📝 Documentation:
- Readme.md: Add note on folder structure for track.sh script to function properly
- Readme.md: Add instructions for contributing to the project
Chore:
- Remove .env file from gitignore and delete it
- Add logs directory to gitignore
- Delete logs/03-28-2023.txt file
Contributions are welcome! To contribute to this project, follow these steps:
- Fork the repository to your own GitHub account.
- Clone the repository to your local machine.
- Create a new branch for your feature or bug fix.
- Make your changes and commit them to your branch.
- Push your changes to your fork on GitHub.
- Open a pull request from your fork to the
main
branch of the original repository. - Wait for feedback and approval from the project maintainers.