benyanke / templates-1

πŸ“‚ Pre-made .devcontainer folders for starting your next project

Geek Repo:Geek Repo

Github PK Tool:Github PK Tool

Community devcontainer templates

πŸ₯§ Pre-baked @devcontainers configurations to get you started

πŸ”§ 80% of the configuration you'll ever need
πŸ’» Ready to go with GitHub Codespaces
πŸš€ Quickly get up-and-running with a devcontainer
🐳 No need to mess with a Dockerfile

Usage

Codespaces Devcontainers

After creating a GitHub Codespace (or a devcontainer in VS Code), open the Command Palette to find the Dev Containers: Add Dev Container Configuration Files... command. After you run it, VS Code will guide you through the creation of a .devcontainer/devcontainer.json file!

Make sure you click the Show All Definitions... option to see our unofficial templates!

Development

GitHub.dev

πŸ“’ We want you to contribute!

Guess what? You don't even need to leave your browser to add a feature template! Since these devcontainer-template.json files are just JSON files, we don't need a full IDE with a terminal; all we need is a JSON text editor.

To add a feature, all you need to do is...

  1. Fork this repository.
  2. Press . (period) on your keyboard to open GitHub.dev.
  3. Make any changes.
  4. Commit to your forked repo.
  5. Open a Pull Request to this repo.
  6. Profit! πŸŽ‰

πŸ“™ You can find more information in the contributing guide

Docs website

If you want to contribute to the docs website, you'll actually need to spin up a local development environment. We do offer a preconfigured devcontainer for GitHub Codespaces or VS Code Dev Containers, but you can use anything that fits the requirements described in the devcontainer.json file.

⚠️ All the docs/tools/ scripts assume that you're current working directory is the docs/ folder, not the root of the repository. It's like a subproject!

About

πŸ“‚ Pre-made .devcontainer folders for starting your next project

License:MIT License


Languages

Language:Shell 68.1%Language:JavaScript 31.9%