Over the last twelve months, crab.fit has seen a substantial increase in activity. This may be a sign that interest in this project is rising, and that the open source community has embraced this project.
Open Hub makes this determination by comparing the total number of commits made by all developers during the most recent twelve months with the same figure for the prior twelve months. The number of developers and total lines of code are not considered.
Over the past twelve months, 6 developers contributed to crab.fit. This is an average size team compared to all projects on Open Hub.
For this measurement, Open Hub considers only recent changes to the code. Over the entire history of the project, 9 developers have contributed.
The first lines of source code were added to crab.fit in February, 2021. If this young project has had recent activity, then it likely has passed its critical early start-up period, and has become established. The project still may be rapidly changing, innovative and exciting, and finding its focus.
As this project matures, a longer source control history in conjunction with recent activity might indicate that the project has enough merit to hold contributors interest for a long time. It might indicate a mature and relatively bug-free code base, and can be a sign of an organized, dedicated development team.
Note: The source code for crab.fit might actually be older than the source control history can reveal. Many new projects begin by incorporating a large amount of source code from existing, older projects. You might be able to tell whether this is the case by looking for a rapid rise in the amount of code early in the project's history.
crab.fit is written mostly in TypeScript.
Across all TypeScript projects on Open Hub, 16% of all source code lines are comments.
This holds true for crab.fit as well. It contains the same ratio of comment lines to code lines as the majority of TypeScript projects in Open Hub.
A high number of comments might indicate that the code is well-documented and organized, and could be a sign of a helpful and disciplined development team.