People are using my Action :D
Mike Rogers ✈️
Posted on September 2, 2020
My GitHub Action ( TypoCI/spellcheck-action FYI! ) is coming along nicely, now I'm moving onto the hardest part...seeing if people will use it!
It's pretty daunting, I'm fairly certain I've caught most the show stopping bugs, but all the hard work could be for nothing if no one uses it.
Today I had a quick search on GitHub & found I had someone actually using my Action! I didn't know them or anything! It was pretty sweet!
Now I have a user, I thought I should write down some thoughts about how I intend to double, or even triple that number.
Counting Users Is Hard!
Out of the box GitHub doesn't offer anything to tell me the amount of people using my action :/
Initially I was looking at how many Stars my repository had, but then I realised I personally don't Star stuff that often, so it could be a poor metric to track.
For now, I've been searching GitHub for instances of typoci/spellcheck-action
which seems to show people who are using it on public repos. I think that's a solid approach to figure out who is using the GitHub Action for now.
The GitHub Marketplace Is Quiet
I submitted my GitHub Action to the GitHub Marketplace, but I'm not expecting a big rush of users from it.
A quick search suggests the terms "spellcheck" and "spelling" shows I already have competition (Who out rank me massively). Plus when I look at the insights from my GitHub Application which has been in the marketplace almost a year, it's suggesting less than 2,000 people visited my listing.
I'm not going to put much time into the Marketplace for now.
Word of (Open Source Code) Mouth
One of the main ways I discover useful GitHub Actions by looking at their .github/workflows
folder on GitHub. I suspect this is pretty common for others also.
My plan for my next free weekend is to open PRs on all my open source projects to add it. Assuming I don't spot any major problems, I'll use them as examples for other Open Source projects to copy.
Adding a listing to Dev.to
I have a 10 credits on dev.to to use, I was saving for them for when I next need to find a job & want to put my portfolio out there, but I think this could be a fun way to use them.
I think a basic "Here's a GitHub Action to check your spelling" listing should be a-ok.
Making A How To Video
The first time I saw GitHub Actions in the wild I had zero idea on how they worked, so I copied the sample code & once it ran...I had a lovely failure message waiting for me.
I don't want anyone to have that experience. I'm going to try and make a short video on how to install my extension & what to expect. I think that should help :)
Posted on September 2, 2020
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