- Systems and Data Analyst
- Web development and Scripting
- Bachelors of Cybersecurity & Information Assurance
- Abblix/Oidc.Server - Project banner with informative badges. Clear project description, certification details with informative tables, and unicode icons. Detailed installation guide, links to comprehensive documentation and a getting started guide, and licensing information. Easy navigation with a table of contents for quick access to all sections.
- ai/size-limit - Project logo, clear description, screenshot, step-by-step installing instructions.
- aimeos/aimeos-typo3 - Project logo. Clear description of what the project does. Demo screenshot. TOC for easy navigation. Easy installation and setup sections with screenshots. Links for further reading.
- alichtman/shallow-backup - Clear description of what the project does. GIF Demo. TOC for easy navigation. Badges. Links for further reading. Simple install instructions.
- alichtman/stronghold - Project logo. Clear description of what the project does. GIF Demo. TOC for easy navigation. Badges. Links for further reading. Simple install instructions.
- amitmerchant1990/electron-markdownify - Project logo. Minimalist description of what it is. GIF demo of the project. Key features. How to install guide. Credits.
- amplication/amplication - Clear project logo. Brief explanation. All features explained. Clean documentation. Useful links (website, docs, discord). List of contributors with their pictures and usernames.
- ankitwasankar/mftool-java - Project logo with a short display of what can be achieved with it, TOC for easy navigation, important badges, clean installation guide, and multiple code snippets showing how to use the functionality.
- AntonioFalcaoJr/EventualShop - The project has a logo and well-defined sections such as: information about the project, the architectural solution, along with reference links such as articles, videos, and documentation. It explains how to run the project in different environments (development and production). It has documented load tests, it also describes which technologies are used, and it has diagrams for the archetype.
- aregtech/areg-sdk - Logo. Multiple info and statistics badges. List of contributors and stargazers with pictures. TOC and "Back to top" links for easy navigation. Headlines with graphics. Topic hide/show menu. Project description and philosophy. Clone and integration instructions. Quick build with multiple tools. Tools configuration instructions. Reference to examples and Demo projects. Reference to use cases. References to guidance and Wiki pages. Links with badges to contact. Links with badges to share the project on social networks.
Diagrams, source code maps, and discussing invariants and design decisions
- esbuild - Great use of graphics for visualisations and project structure. Includes a list of important principles for the project.
- Flutter Engine - Good use of high level diagrams to show the stack and its parts. Describes the main processes. Describes platform invariants.
- GitLab - Calls out design decisions.
- Linux cryptography - Calls out different types of components, provides searchable areas, calls out invariants of different components, and describes structure with diagrams.
- Neovim - Describes the main processes/lifecycle.
- Oh My Zsh - Describes the initialization process, calls out environment requirements.
- Redis - Good source code map. Overviews of key files. Good use of documentation comments in-code rather than inline comments.
- Tauri - Well made source code map, discusses architecture considerations, calls out important dependencies.
- VS Code - Good use of high-level diagrams. Describes source organisation.
Embedding an animated gif in your README quickly demonstrates what your project does and catches the reader's eye. Here are a few programs that can help you quickly create gifs for your project:
- Gifski - FREE - More vivid colors than the rest, but still keeps size low.
- Giphy Capture - FREE - Easy to upload to giphy.com, with a slightly annoying UX.
- LICEcap - FREE - Less intuitive, but with more features.
- Peek - FREE - Simple and easy to use for Linux users.
- ScreenToGif - FREE - Open source, with a customizable UI and easily editable GIFs, easy to get started.
- terminalizer - FREE - Record your terminal and generate animated GIF images or share a web player.
- ttystudio - FREE - For command-line tools, a terminal-to-GIF recorder minus the headaches.
- vhs - FREE - Generate beautiful terminal GIFs with a simple scripting language

