GIT_FEED

MicrosoftDocs/power-platform

Documentation for Microsoft Power Platform

View on GitHub

What it does

This is the official documentation repository for Microsoft Power Platform, a suite of tools that lets businesses build apps, automate workflows, and analyze data without traditional software development. It serves as the public-facing knowledge base where users and contributors can access and improve guides for products like Power Apps, Power Automate, and Power BI.

Why it matters

Power Platform has become a major player in the 'low-code' market, enabling companies to build internal tools and automate processes without hiring large engineering teams — a significant cost and speed advantage. With over 600 contributors actively shaping its documentation, it signals a large and growing ecosystem that builders should consider when evaluating no-code and automation platforms for their organizations.

45Hot

Gaining traction — heating up

Stars
475
Forks
682
Contributors
634
Language
PowerShell

Score updated Mar 21, 2026

Related projects

70Breakout

The Supabase CLI is a command-line tool that lets developers manage their Supabase projects — an open-source alternative to Google's Firebase backend platform — directly from their computer's terminal. It handles everything from setting up a local development environment and managing database changes, to deploying serverless functions and automatically generating code types from your database structure.

// why it matters As more startups look to avoid vendor lock-in with proprietary backends like Firebase, Supabase has emerged as a serious open-source contender, and this CLI is the primary tool that makes that workflow practical at scale. With nearly 1,800 stars and 162 contributors, it signals strong developer adoption — meaning teams building on Supabase have a mature, community-backed toolchain that can support everything from side projects to production applications.

Go1.8k stars391 forks162 contrib

Homebrew Core is the central library of software packages for Homebrew, the most popular free tool for installing software on Mac and Linux computers. It contains thousands of pre-built recipes that let developers quickly install common software tools with a single command instead of manually downloading and configuring them.

// why it matters With over 15,000 stars and 15,000 contributors, Homebrew is effectively the default way millions of developers set up their machines, making it a critical distribution channel for developer-facing software. If you're building a tool that developers need to install, getting it listed here dramatically lowers the barrier to adoption and signals legitimacy to a technical audience.

Ruby15.2k stars13.5k forks15031 contrib

Cognetivy gives AI coding assistants a structured memory and process system, storing their work — including what steps were taken, what decisions were made, and what was produced — in an organized folder on your computer. Instead of losing important context when an AI coding session ends, everything is saved as traceable, repeatable workflows that you can review, rerun, and compare.

// why it matters As AI coding agents become central to software development, the ability to audit, repeat, and improve what those agents do is quickly becoming a competitive advantage — especially for teams that need accountability or consistency. Cognetivy is positioning itself as foundational infrastructure for this shift, similar to how version control became non-negotiable once teams grew beyond solo developers.

TypeScript585 stars57 forks3 contrib

LLVM is the foundational technology that turns code written by developers into programs that computers can actually run, and it's used to build compilers for languages like C, C++, and many others. Think of it as the invisible translation engine that sits behind many of the world's most popular programming languages and development tools.

// why it matters Nearly every major tech company — Apple, Google, Meta, and more — relies on LLVM to power their software development pipelines, meaning it underpins the tools that build most modern apps and systems. For builders, understanding LLVM matters because it's the infrastructure behind emerging programming languages and performance-critical software, making it a key leverage point for teams building developer tools, new languages, or platform technologies.

LLVM37.6k stars16.7k forks8768 contrib
// SUBSCRIBE

The repos that moved this week, why they matter, and what to watch next. One email. No noise.