joe becomes one of the owners around 3 days after it is created, and lemon joins the owner team later in the year, when the community has around 300 members.
Our main source of new users at this point is a post on Reddit that happens to get very good SEO. We are one of the top 10 search engine hits for the search term "python discord".
The public moderation bot we're using at the time, Rowboat, announces it will be shutting down. We decide that we'll write our own bot to handle moderation, so that we can have more control over its features. We also buy a domain and start making a website in Flask.
Our very first Code Jam attracts a handful of users who work in random
teams of 2. We ask our participants to write a snake-themed Discord bot. Most of the code written
for this jam still lives on in SeasonalBot, and you can play with it by using the
.snakes
command. For more information on this event, see the event page
Since data privacy is quite important to us, we create a privacy page pretty much as soon as our new bot and site starts collecting some data. To this day, we keep our privacy policy up to date with all changes, and since April 2020 we've started doing monthly data reviews.
At this point in time, there are only two serious Python communities on Discord - Ours, and one called Do You Even Python. We approach the owners of DYEP with a bold proposal - let's shut down their community, replace it with links to ours, and in return we will let their staff join our staff. This gives us a big boost in members, and eventually leads to @eivl and @Mr. Hemlock joining our Admin team
As we continue to grow, we approach the r/Python subreddit and ask to become their official Discord community. They agree, and we become listed in their sidebar, giving us yet another source of new members.
After being rejected for their Partner program several times, we finally get approved. The recent partnership with the r/Python subreddit plays a significant role in qualifying us for this partnership.
We create a second bot for our community and fill it up with simple, fun and relatively easy issues. The idea is to create an approachable arena for our members to cut their open-source teeth on, and to provide lots of help and hand-holding for those who get stuck. We're training our members to be productive contributors in the open-source ecosystem.
We partner with RLBot, move from GitLab to GitHub, and start putting together the first Advent of Code event.
Our very first package on PyPI, django-simple-bulma is a package that sets up the Bulma CSS framework for your Django application and lets you configure everything in settings.py.
The site is getting more and more complex, and it's time for a rewrite. We decide to go for a different stack, and build a website based on Django, DRF, Bulma and PostgreSQL.
Inspired by the Adafruit, Rust and Django communities, an essential community pillar is created; Our Code of Conduct.
After being a long time active contributor to our projects and the driving force behind our events, Ves Zappa joined the Owners team alongside joe & lemon.
More than tripling in size since the year before, the community hits 30000 users. At this point, we're probably the largest Python chat community on the planet.
Our Code Jams are becoming an increasingly big deal, and the Kivy core developers join us to judge the event and help out our members during the event. One of them, @tshirtman, even joins our staff!
We release our dynamic help-channel system, which allows you to claim your very own help channel instead of fighting over the static help channels. We release a Help Channel Guide to help our members fully understand how the system works.
The creator of Arcade, Paul Vincent Craven, joins us as a judge. Several of the Code Jam participants also end up getting involved contributing to the Arcade repository.
Having originally planned to write our own ModMail bot from scratch, we come across an exceptionally good ModMail bot by kyb3r and decide to just self-host that one instead.
After working towards this goal for months, we finally work out an arrangement with the PSF that allows us to be listed on that most holiest of websites: https://python.org/. There was much rejoicing.
After getting numerous requests to publish beautiful data on member count and channel use, we create stats.pythondiscord.com for all to enjoy.
Sponsored by the Django Software Foundation and JetBrains, the Summer Code Jam for 2020 attracts hundreds of participants, and sees the creation of some fantastic projects. Check them out in our judge stream below:
PyWeek, a game jam that has been running since 2005, joins Python Discord as one of our official events. Find more information about PyWeek on their official website.
After years of hard work, we hit 100,000 users. A monumental milestone, and one we're very proud of. To commemorate it, we create this timeline.