wesleytodd/tooling — explained in plain English
Analysis updated 2026-07-18 · repo last pushed 2020-09-18
Raise a Node.js limitation you keep hitting while building a linter or bundler.
Join the Slack workspace to swap notes with other dev-tool builders.
Propose a Node.js feature that would make tool-building easier.
Help document community learnings about building tools in Node.js.
| wesleytodd/tooling | 0verflowme/alarm-clock | 0verflowme/seclists | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Language | — | CSS | — |
| Last pushed | 2020-09-18 | 2022-10-03 | 2020-05-03 |
| Maintenance | Dormant | Dormant | Dormant |
| Setup difficulty | easy | easy | easy |
| Complexity | 1/5 | 2/5 | 1/5 |
| Audience | developer | vibe coder | ops devops |
Figures from each repo's GitHub metadata at analysis time.
This is a discussion hub for people who build developer tools using Node.js, think linters, test runners, build systems, package managers, and similar utilities. The group exists to figure out what Node.js could do better to make it easier to write these kinds of tools. It's not a place to find finished tools or internal Node.js infrastructure. Instead, it's where developers gather to share what's working well, what's frustrating, and what features or improvements Node.js itself could offer. For example, if you're building a linter or bundler in Node.js and you keep running into the same limitation, this is where you'd raise that problem and talk with others who've hit the same wall. The group operates informally on a public Slack channel and through GitHub discussions and meetings. Anyone can join the Slack workspace, share their experience building tools, propose ideas, or help document what the community learns. The README acknowledges the whole thing is still being figured out, so there's room for input on how it should work. This would appeal to anyone making developer tools, whether you're building a new test framework, a bundler, a linter, or a code compiler. It's also relevant to maintainers of existing tools who want to influence what Node.js offers to make their work easier. The real value is in pooling feedback from tool developers so the Node.js project can prioritize improvements that actually matter to the people using it for this work.
A discussion hub where Node.js tool builders (linters, bundlers, test runners) share pain points and shape what Node.js should offer them.
Dormant — no commits in 2+ years (last push 2020-09-18).
The README does not state license terms.
Setup difficulty is rated easy, with roughly 5min to a first successful run.
Mainly developer.
This repo across BitVibe Labs
double-check against the repo, no cap.