Economy collaborators

The economy collaborators metric represents a measure of collaboration on software projects. It is defined as the sum of git pushes sent and pull requests opened by a developer to a repository owned by another developer or organization. See the documentation for git push for a description of the git push command. See our documentation for Pull Requests and Repositories for more information about supported functionality.

Top Economy Collaborators

How to read this chart

Each outer arc corresponds to an economy. The width of each band connecting two economies corresponds to the sum of git pushes sent and pull requests opened from one economy to the other. Wider bands correspond to greater volumes of git pushes sent and pull requests opened. The color of each connecting band corresponds to the economy from which the git push + pull request sum originated. For example, if the outer arc of an economy is dark blue, the light blue band connecting it to another economy's outer arc represents the sum of git pushes and pull requests from the dark blue economy to the other economy.

Methodological note

Metrics for economies are only reported when there are 100 or more unique developers performing the relevant activity within the time period. See the datasheet in our repository for more on the metrics, definitions, representativeness, and limitations of the GitHub Innovation Graph.

Want to explore more than just the top collaborators?

Access the complete CSV file for economy collaborators along with the rest of the dataset in our repository.

Outbound Collaborators Over Time

How to read this chart

The width of each stream corresponds to the sum of git pushes sent and pull requests opened from an economy to the rest of the world. Wider streams correspond to greater volumes of git pushes sent and pull requests opened. By default, the top 30 economies per quarter are displayed. If an economy enters the top 30 in any quarter through the series, data for that economy are displayed for every quarter in the series. Thus, more than 30 economies may appear on the chart. You can select or deselect economies to narrow focus.

Methodological note

Metrics for economies are only reported when there are 100 or more unique developers performing the relevant activity within the time period. See the datasheet in our repository for more on the metrics, definitions, representativeness, and limitations of the GitHub Innovation Graph.

Want to explore more than just the top collaborators?

Access the complete CSV file for economy collaborators along with the rest of the dataset in our repository.

Inbound Collaborators Over Time

How to read this chart

The width of each stream corresponds to the sum of git pushes sent and pull requests opened from the rest of the world to an economy. Wider streams correspond to greater volumes of git pushes sent and pull requests opened. By default, the top 30 economies per quarter are displayed. If an economy enters the top 30 in any quarter through the series, data for that economy are displayed for every quarter in the series. Thus, more than 30 economies may appear on the chart. You can select or deselect economies to narrow focus.

Methodological note

Metrics for economies are only reported when there are 100 or more unique developers performing the relevant activity within the time period. See the datasheet in our repository for more on the metrics, definitions, representativeness, and limitations of the GitHub Innovation Graph.

Want to explore more than just the top collaborators?

Access the complete CSV file for economy collaborators along with the rest of the dataset in our repository.