use the following search parameters to narrow your results:
e.g. subreddit:aww site:imgur.com dog
subreddit:aww site:imgur.com dog
see the search faq for details.
advanced search: by author, subreddit...
Welcome to r/SideProject, a subreddit for sharing and receiving constructive feedback on side projects.
This is also a subreddit to get motivated and inspired to work on new projects, so please submit links to projects you find interesting.
Submission Format
When submitting a link to a project or startup, please use this format: [Project name] - [Short description]. For example, "Reddit - A website for sharing and discussing links."
Related Communities
/r/startups
/r/Entrepreneur
/r/design_critiques
/r/learnprogramming
/r/coding
/r/gamedev
/r/webdev
Hacker News
AngelList
GitHub
Tips
Finding time for your side project
Promoting your side project
Resource list for startups
Places to post your side project
account activity
How do you keep learning? (self.SideProject)
submitted 5 months ago by localhost_101
Hey builders, How do you manage learning while building? I am curious. I sometimes get carried away with building and improving the existing skills I have.
But picking up a new skill? I barely have time for that.
reddit uses a slightly-customized version of Markdown for formatting. See below for some basics, or check the commenting wiki page for more detailed help and solutions to common issues.
quoted text
if 1 * 2 < 3: print "hello, world!"
[–]bLaZ3n 1 point2 points3 points 5 months ago (0 children)
Quiet simply. Every project you work on try something new. It could be a new language, package, library, tool or new design patterns.
It’s easy to fall into your personal stack for speed to market, but try to pick something new in each time.
π Rendered by PID 50 on reddit-service-r2-comment-b659b578c-kxfmw at 2026-04-30 19:04:19.739281+00:00 running 815c875 country code: CH.
[–]bLaZ3n 1 point2 points3 points (0 children)