Tired of explain what an API is on normal dating apps? CodeNearby 2.0 is here to help you swipe right on your next co-founder or coding buddy.

Ever sat in front of your IDE, drowning in spaghetti code, wishing you had a partner-in-crime to share the pain? Sure, you could ask your non-tech friends, but they think "Java" and "JavaScript" are the same thing. Enter CodeNearby 2.0 — literally Tinder, but for people who speak in binary.
CodeNearby is an open-source social network designed exclusively for developers to find coding partners, side-project collaborators, or just someone to complain about CSS with.
After a rather clunky first launch, the creators did a quick hotfix and dropped version 2.0 with some juicy upgrades:
Over on Product Hunt, the project has racked up a solid 116 points and triggered some passionate discussions.
Some users are absolutely loving the gamified swipe-to-match vibe:
"Finally tried matching with devs in my area and actually chatted with someone working on a similar side project. The swipe format feels a little Tinder-ish but it's a clever way to cut through the noise of generic dev forums."
But of course, seasoned developers are quick to spot the potential loopholes:
"Love the concept, but please add skill tags and project repos to profiles before matching. Right now, it's hard to tell if someone actually complements your skillset or if you're just going to match with five frontend devs in a row and have no one to write the database logic."
At the end of the day, finding a solid co-founder or side-project buddy is notoriously hard. CodeNearby 2.0 makes the awkward ice-breaking phase a lot more natural by putting code and shared interests front and center.
Just remember: a fancy matching algorithm won't save you from a partner who refuses to write documentation. Swipe responsibly, keep your expectations realistic, and may your git merges be conflict-free.
Source: Product Hunt