If you're anything like me, you're lazy... and then you're forgetful. By that I mean that you mean to write things (in the future), so you write down a nifty little #TODO(name) (Or however you comment in your language of choice). After that, however, you get so caught up in other things that you forget about implementing these features later on. Not any longer!
You see, I created Pygemony so that I could run Pygemony and instantly have the todos be created as issues on my Github page. This way, I can always know what I forgot to implement.
Moreover, Pygemony won't spam your issues page, as it hashes and saves these stored todos into a .pyg-submitted into your git repository.
Naturally, the first step is to get your hands on a copy of it:
Using pip:
pip install pygemony==0.4.2
After you've gotten a copy, there's one more thing you need to do: Generate a Github OAUTH token.
You can read up more about oauth tokens here: https://help.github.com/articles/creating-an-access-token-for-command-line-use/
Okay, since you've got yourself a copy of Pygemony and an OAuth token, you're ready to roll. Example usage of Pygemony:
pygemony --username USERNAME --token GITHUB_TOKEN
Whenever I run it, it looks like so:
pygemony --username GrappigPanda --token $GITHUB_TOKEN
(I find it nice and easy to set an environmental variable $GITHUB_TOKEN, not necessary at all!)
Pygemony should take care of all of the extra work after this and detect where to open the issues.
If, however, you want Pygemony to report to somewhere else, you can specify by adding additional command-line arguments:
--owner: The owner of the repo (think GrappigPanda)
--repo: The repo's name (think Pygemony)
Whenever you inevitably run into bugs because I'm dumb and don't follow best practices, feel free to open a Github issue and yell and scream at me. But please don't actually yell and scream at me because that's demotivational and no one wants that.
https://github.com/GrappigPanda/pygemony/issues
https://github.com/GrappigPanda/GithubTODOScraper/issues
As this project currently stands, I do NOT consider it complete and I consider it in very early alpha stages. I have a list of issues available on the project's github page Pygemony which I'm more than happy to receive help with.
C C++ Python (naturally :) Javascript