Would you happen to know who the developers are that left your project? 🔎 📉

The Leaving Developers metric defines the number of developers that left the project during the analyzed period. We need this metric to measure the growth of a project in terms of contributors.

Learn about this metric in a new Metric of the Month chapter explained by Luis Cañas-Díaz ➡️ https://blog.bitergia.com/2023/02/23/leaving-developers-metric-of-the-month-february-2023/

#project #metricofthemonth #leavingdevelopers

Leaving Developers: Metric of the Month, February 2023

Welcome to the fourth chapter of the Metric of the Month: Leaving Developers. In the last chapter, we talked about Attracted Developers, a metric that helps us to understand the flow of new contributors joining a project or community. In this chapter, we will fully understand the contributors by studying the people leaving the project. ... Continue Reading →

The Software Development Analytics Blog

Have you ever heard about the "Pony factor" as a metric of a project? Now, have a look at the "Elephant factor", because many #freesoftware projects have a (very big) elephant in the room. We started to use this metric several years ago to account for those elephants.
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RT @Bitergia
The first chapter of the #MetricoftheMonth is here! We're glad to present the first metric: The Elephant Factor!

What is the distribution of work in the co…
https://twitter.com/Bitergia/status/1580570105100267522

Bitergia on Twitter

“The first chapter of the #MetricoftheMonth is here! We're glad to present the first metric: The Elephant Factor! What is the distribution of work in the community? Read more about it in our blog post and with a demo video with examples https://t.co/wj5gg1ufYi”

Twitter