You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Connecting with other programmers has never been easier! Use our app to find other developers, groups and repositories on GitHub. With Hub Finder, you'll be able to get help from others and share your work easily. All for free, of course.
A web application that allows users to search for GitHub profiles and repositories.Displays user details such as profile picture, bio, location, number of repositories, followers, and following.
GithubHunt is a simple github finder tool, built with reactjs, to provide github users with a simple access of features like – search user, most followed users, most starred repositories and many more.
Discover and explore GitHub profiles with ease using the GitHub Profile Finder. This web application allows users to search for GitHub users, view their profiles, repositories, and followers. Powered by the GitHub API, it provides a seamless experience for navigating through developers' information.
A react app that lets you search for github users and provide a summary for a specific user. Uses the Context API for state management and React Hooks.
A responsive React app for searching and viewing GitHub user profiles using the GitHub API. Developed as a challenge from frontendmentor.io. Built with React, TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, and tested with Jest & React Testing Library.
The Flutter-based cross-platform application, inspired by GithubProfileFinder, leverages the power of Github's API to provide users with a seamless and intuitive experience for exploring Github profiles.
This project is a react app that, through the proposed entry, makes requests to the Github API by searching profiles on github and returning information and data, such as profile image, biography, latest repositories, etc. It was developed with the aim of studying the React JS library during the React Front To Back course, taught by @bradtraversy.