Request to add the Adafruit Industries curated awesome list devoted to CircuitPython, a microcontroller based version of Python, to the Python category. The Adafruit CircuitPython awesome list is at https://github.com/adafruit/awesome-circuitpython
[https://github.com/adafruit/awesome-circuitpython]
[Request to add the Adafruit Industries curated awesome list devoted to CircuitPython, a microcontroller based version of Python, to the Python category.]
By submitting this pull request I confirm I've read and complied with the below requirements
Please read it multiple times. I spent a lot of time on these guidelines and most people miss a lot.
Requirements for your pull request
• I have read and understood the contribution guidelines and the instructions for creating a list.
• This pull request has a descriptive title.
For example, Add Name of List, not Update readme.md or Add awesome list.
• The entry in the Awesome list should:
o Include a short description about the project/theme of the list. It should not describe the list itself.
Example: - [Fish](…) - User-friendly shell., not - [Fish](…) - Resources for Fish..
o Be added at the bottom of the appropriate category.
• The list I'm submitting complies with these requirements:
Requirements for your Awesome list
• Has been around for at least 30 days.
That means 30 days from either the first real commit or when it was open-sourced. Whatever is most recent.
• It's the result of hard work and the best I could possibly produce.
• Non-generated Markdown file in a GitHub repo.
• Includes a succinct description of the project/theme at the top of the readme. (Example)
• The repo should have awesome-list & awesome as GitHub topics. I encourage you to add more relevant topics.
• Not a duplicate.
• Only has awesome items. Awesome lists are curations of the best, not everything.
• Includes a project logo/illustration whenever possible.
o Either fullwidth or placed at the top-right of the readme. (Example)
o The image should link to the project website or any relevant website.
o The image should be high-DPI. Set it to maximum half the width of the original image.
• Entries have a description, unless the title is descriptive enough by itself. It rarely is though.
• Includes the Awesome badge.
o Should be placed on the right side of the readme heading.
o Should link back to this list.
• Has a Table of Contents section.
o Should be named Contents, not Table of Contents.
o Should be the first section in the list.
o Should only have one level of sub-lists, preferably none.
• Has an appropriate license.
o That means something like CC0, not a code licence like MIT, BSD, Apache, etc.
o WTFPL and Unlicense are not acceptable licenses.
o If you use a license badge, it should be SVG, not PNG.
• Has contribution guidelines.
o The file should be named contributing.md. Casing is up to you.
• Has consistent formatting and proper spelling/grammar.
o The link and description are separated by a dash.
Example: - [AVA](…) - JavaScript test runner.
o The description starts with an uppercase character and ends with a period.
o Consistent and correct naming. For example, Node.js, not NodeJS or node.js.
• Doesn't include a Travis badge.
You can still use Travis for list linting, but the badge has no value in the readme.
Go to the top and read it again.