Alternatives to Code Climate logo

Alternatives to Code Climate

Codacy, Codecov, Coveralls, SonarQube, and GitPrime are the most popular alternatives and competitors to Code Climate.
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What is Code Climate and what are its top alternatives?

After each Git push, Code Climate analyzes your code for complexity, duplication, and common smells to determine changes in quality and surface technical debt hotspots.
Code Climate is a tool in the Code Review category of a tech stack.

Top Alternatives to Code Climate

  • Codacy
    Codacy

    Codacy automates code reviews and monitors code quality on every commit and pull request on more than 40 programming languages reporting back the impact of every commit or PR, issues concerning code style, best practices and security. ...

  • Codecov
    Codecov

    Our patrons rave about our elegant coverage reports, integrated pull request comments, interactive commit graphs, our Chrome plugin and security. ...

  • Coveralls
    Coveralls

    Coveralls works with your CI server and sifts through your coverage data to find issues you didn't even know you had before they become a problem. Free for open source, pro accounts for private repos, instant sign up with GitHub OAuth. ...

  • SonarQube
    SonarQube

    SonarQube provides an overview of the overall health of your source code and even more importantly, it highlights issues found on new code. With a Quality Gate set on your project, you will simply fix the Leak and start mechanically improving. ...

  • GitPrime
    GitPrime

    GitPrime uses data from GitHub, GitLab, BitBucket—or any Git based code repository—to help engineering leaders move faster, optimize work patterns, and advocate for engineering with concrete data. ...

  • RuboCop
    RuboCop

    RuboCop is a Ruby static code analyzer. Out of the box it will enforce many of the guidelines outlined in the community Ruby Style Guide. ...

  • Scrutinizer
    Scrutinizer

    Scrutinizer is a continuous inspection platform helping you to create better software. ...

  • JavaScript
    JavaScript

    JavaScript is most known as the scripting language for Web pages, but used in many non-browser environments as well such as node.js or Apache CouchDB. It is a prototype-based, multi-paradigm scripting language that is dynamic,and supports object-oriented, imperative, and functional programming styles. ...

Code Climate alternatives & related posts

Codacy logo

Codacy

291
546
247
Automate and Standardize Code Reviews for 40+ languages
291
546
+ 1
247
PROS OF CODACY
  • 44
    Automated code review
  • 35
    Easy setup
  • 29
    Free for open source
  • 20
    Customizable
  • 18
    Helps reduce technical debt
  • 14
    Better coding
  • 13
    Best scala support
  • 11
    Faster Employee Onboarding
  • 10
    Duplication detector
  • 10
    Great UI
  • 9
    PHP integration
  • 6
    Python inspection
  • 5
    Tools for JVM analysis
  • 5
    Many integrations
  • 4
    Github Integration
  • 3
    Must-have for Java
  • 3
    Easy Travis integration
  • 3
    Items can be ignored in the UI
  • 3
    Asdasdas
  • 2
    Gitlab
  • 0
    Asdas
CONS OF CODACY
  • 6
    No support for private Git or Azure DevOps git

related Codacy posts

Ganesa Vijayakumar
Full Stack Coder | Technical Lead · | 19 upvotes · 4.5M views

I'm planning to create a web application and also a mobile application to provide a very good shopping experience to the end customers. Shortly, my application will be aggregate the product details from difference sources and giving a clear picture to the user that when and where to buy that product with best in Quality and cost.

I have planned to develop this in many milestones for adding N number of features and I have picked my first part to complete the core part (aggregate the product details from different sources).

As per my work experience and knowledge, I have chosen the followings stacks to this mission.

UI: I would like to develop this application using React, React Router and React Native since I'm a little bit familiar on this and also most importantly these will help on developing both web and mobile apps. In addition, I'm gonna use the stacks JavaScript, jQuery, jQuery UI, jQuery Mobile, Bootstrap wherever required.

Service: I have planned to use Java as the main business layer language as I have 7+ years of experience on this I believe I can do better work using Java than other languages. In addition, I'm thinking to use the stacks Node.js.

Database and ORM: I'm gonna pick MySQL as DB and Hibernate as ORM since I have a piece of good knowledge and also work experience on this combination.

Search Engine: I need to deal with a large amount of product data and it's in-detailed info to provide enough details to end user at the same time I need to focus on the performance area too. so I have decided to use Solr as a search engine for product search and suggestions. In addition, I'm thinking to replace Solr by Elasticsearch once explored/reviewed enough about Elasticsearch.

Host: As of now, my plan to complete the application with decent features first and deploy it in a free hosting environment like Docker and Heroku and then once it is stable then I have planned to use the AWS products Amazon S3, EC2, Amazon RDS and Amazon Route 53. I'm not sure about Microsoft Azure that what is the specialty in it than Heroku and Amazon EC2 Container Service. Anyhow, I will do explore these once again and pick the best suite one for my requirement once I reached this level.

Build and Repositories: I have decided to choose Apache Maven and Git as these are my favorites and also so popular on respectively build and repositories.

Additional Utilities :) - I would like to choose Codacy for code review as their Startup plan will be very helpful to this application. I'm already experienced with Google CheckStyle and SonarQube even I'm looking something on Codacy.

Happy Coding! Suggestions are welcome! :)

Thanks, Ganesa

See more

It is very important to have clean code. To be sure that the code quality is not really bad I use a few tools. I love SonarQube with many relevant hints and deep analysis of code. codebeat isn't so detailed, but it can find complexity issues and duplications. Codacy cannot find more bugs then your IDE. The winner for me is SonarQube that shows me really relevant bugs in my code.

See more
Codecov logo

Codecov

2.3K
322
102
Hosted coverage reports with awesome features to enhance your CI workflow
2.3K
322
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102
PROS OF CODECOV
  • 17
    More stable than coveralls
  • 17
    Easy setup
  • 14
    GitHub integration
  • 11
    They reply their users
  • 10
    Easy setup,great ui
  • 5
    Easily see per-commit coverage in GitHub
  • 5
    Steve is the man
  • 4
    Merges coverage from multiple CI jobs
  • 4
    Golang support
  • 3
    Free for public repositories
  • 3
    Code coverage
  • 3
    JSON in web hook
  • 3
    Newest Android SDK preinstalled
  • 2
    Cool diagrams
  • 1
    Bitbucket Integration
CONS OF CODECOV
  • 1
    GitHub org / team integration is a little too tight
  • 0
    Delayed results by hours since recent outage
  • 0
    Support does not respond to email

related Codecov posts

Tim Abbott
Shared insights
on
CodecovCodecovCoverallsCoveralls
at

We use Codecov because it's a lot better than Coveralls. Both of them provide the useful feature of having nice web-accessible reports of which files have what level of test coverage (though every coverage tool produces reasonably nice HTML in a directory on the local filesystem), and can report on PRs cases where significant new code was added without test coverage.

That said, I'm pretty unhappy with both of them for our use case. The fundamental problem with both of them is that they don't handle the ~1% probability situations with missing data due to networking flakiness well. The reason I think our use case is relevant is that we submit coverage data from multiple jobs (one that runs our frontend test suite and another that runs our backend test suite), and the coverage provider is responsible for combining that data together.

I think the problem is if a test suite runs successfully but due to some operational/networking error between Travis/CircleCI and Codecov the coverage data for part of the codebase doesn't get submitted, Codecov will report a huge coverage drop in a way that is very confusing for our contributors (because they experience it as "why did the coverage drop 12%, all I did was added a test").

We migrated from Coveralls to Codecov because empirically this sort of breakage happened 10x less on Codecov, but it still happens way more often than I'd like.

I wish they put more effort in their retry mechanism and/or providing clearer debugging information (E.g. a big "Missing data" banner) so that one didn't need to be specifically told to ignore Codecov/Coveralls when it reports a giant coverage drop.

See more
Shared insights
on
CodecovCodecovCoverallsCoveralls

Codecov Although I actually use both codecov and Coveralls, I very much like the graphs I get from codecov, and some of their diagnostic tools.

See more
Coveralls logo

Coveralls

1.3K
277
68
Track your project's code coverage over time, changes to files, and badge your GitHub repo
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277
+ 1
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PROS OF COVERALLS
  • 45
    Free for public repositories
  • 13
    Code coverage
  • 7
    Ease of integration
  • 2
    More stable than Codecov
  • 1
    Combines coverage from multiple/parallel test runs
CONS OF COVERALLS
    Be the first to leave a con

    related Coveralls posts

    Tim Abbott
    Shared insights
    on
    CodecovCodecovCoverallsCoveralls
    at

    We use Codecov because it's a lot better than Coveralls. Both of them provide the useful feature of having nice web-accessible reports of which files have what level of test coverage (though every coverage tool produces reasonably nice HTML in a directory on the local filesystem), and can report on PRs cases where significant new code was added without test coverage.

    That said, I'm pretty unhappy with both of them for our use case. The fundamental problem with both of them is that they don't handle the ~1% probability situations with missing data due to networking flakiness well. The reason I think our use case is relevant is that we submit coverage data from multiple jobs (one that runs our frontend test suite and another that runs our backend test suite), and the coverage provider is responsible for combining that data together.

    I think the problem is if a test suite runs successfully but due to some operational/networking error between Travis/CircleCI and Codecov the coverage data for part of the codebase doesn't get submitted, Codecov will report a huge coverage drop in a way that is very confusing for our contributors (because they experience it as "why did the coverage drop 12%, all I did was added a test").

    We migrated from Coveralls to Codecov because empirically this sort of breakage happened 10x less on Codecov, but it still happens way more often than I'd like.

    I wish they put more effort in their retry mechanism and/or providing clearer debugging information (E.g. a big "Missing data" banner) so that one didn't need to be specifically told to ignore Codecov/Coveralls when it reports a giant coverage drop.

    See more
    Shared insights
    on
    CodecovCodecovCoverallsCoveralls

    Codecov Although I actually use both codecov and Coveralls, I very much like the graphs I get from codecov, and some of their diagnostic tools.

    See more
    SonarQube logo

    SonarQube

    1.7K
    2K
    52
    Continuous Code Quality
    1.7K
    2K
    + 1
    52
    PROS OF SONARQUBE
    • 26
      Tracks code complexity and smell trends
    • 16
      IDE Integration
    • 9
      Complete code Review
    • 1
      Difficult to deploy
    CONS OF SONARQUBE
    • 7
      Sales process is long and unfriendly
    • 7
      Paid support is poor, techs arrogant and unhelpful
    • 1
      Does not integrate with Snyk

    related SonarQube posts

    Simon Reymann
    Senior Fullstack Developer at QUANTUSflow Software GmbH · | 30 upvotes · 9M views

    Our whole DevOps stack consists of the following tools:

    • GitHub (incl. GitHub Pages/Markdown for Documentation, GettingStarted and HowTo's) for collaborative review and code management tool
    • Respectively Git as revision control system
    • SourceTree as Git GUI
    • Visual Studio Code as IDE
    • CircleCI for continuous integration (automatize development process)
    • Prettier / TSLint / ESLint as code linter
    • SonarQube as quality gate
    • Docker as container management (incl. Docker Compose for multi-container application management)
    • VirtualBox for operating system simulation tests
    • Kubernetes as cluster management for docker containers
    • Heroku for deploying in test environments
    • nginx as web server (preferably used as facade server in production environment)
    • SSLMate (using OpenSSL) for certificate management
    • Amazon EC2 (incl. Amazon S3) for deploying in stage (production-like) and production environments
    • PostgreSQL as preferred database system
    • Redis as preferred in-memory database/store (great for caching)

    The main reason we have chosen Kubernetes over Docker Swarm is related to the following artifacts:

    • Key features: Easy and flexible installation, Clear dashboard, Great scaling operations, Monitoring is an integral part, Great load balancing concepts, Monitors the condition and ensures compensation in the event of failure.
    • Applications: An application can be deployed using a combination of pods, deployments, and services (or micro-services).
    • Functionality: Kubernetes as a complex installation and setup process, but it not as limited as Docker Swarm.
    • Monitoring: It supports multiple versions of logging and monitoring when the services are deployed within the cluster (Elasticsearch/Kibana (ELK), Heapster/Grafana, Sysdig cloud integration).
    • Scalability: All-in-one framework for distributed systems.
    • Other Benefits: Kubernetes is backed by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF), huge community among container orchestration tools, it is an open source and modular tool that works with any OS.
    See more
    Ganesa Vijayakumar
    Full Stack Coder | Technical Lead · | 19 upvotes · 4.5M views

    I'm planning to create a web application and also a mobile application to provide a very good shopping experience to the end customers. Shortly, my application will be aggregate the product details from difference sources and giving a clear picture to the user that when and where to buy that product with best in Quality and cost.

    I have planned to develop this in many milestones for adding N number of features and I have picked my first part to complete the core part (aggregate the product details from different sources).

    As per my work experience and knowledge, I have chosen the followings stacks to this mission.

    UI: I would like to develop this application using React, React Router and React Native since I'm a little bit familiar on this and also most importantly these will help on developing both web and mobile apps. In addition, I'm gonna use the stacks JavaScript, jQuery, jQuery UI, jQuery Mobile, Bootstrap wherever required.

    Service: I have planned to use Java as the main business layer language as I have 7+ years of experience on this I believe I can do better work using Java than other languages. In addition, I'm thinking to use the stacks Node.js.

    Database and ORM: I'm gonna pick MySQL as DB and Hibernate as ORM since I have a piece of good knowledge and also work experience on this combination.

    Search Engine: I need to deal with a large amount of product data and it's in-detailed info to provide enough details to end user at the same time I need to focus on the performance area too. so I have decided to use Solr as a search engine for product search and suggestions. In addition, I'm thinking to replace Solr by Elasticsearch once explored/reviewed enough about Elasticsearch.

    Host: As of now, my plan to complete the application with decent features first and deploy it in a free hosting environment like Docker and Heroku and then once it is stable then I have planned to use the AWS products Amazon S3, EC2, Amazon RDS and Amazon Route 53. I'm not sure about Microsoft Azure that what is the specialty in it than Heroku and Amazon EC2 Container Service. Anyhow, I will do explore these once again and pick the best suite one for my requirement once I reached this level.

    Build and Repositories: I have decided to choose Apache Maven and Git as these are my favorites and also so popular on respectively build and repositories.

    Additional Utilities :) - I would like to choose Codacy for code review as their Startup plan will be very helpful to this application. I'm already experienced with Google CheckStyle and SonarQube even I'm looking something on Codacy.

    Happy Coding! Suggestions are welcome! :)

    Thanks, Ganesa

    See more
    GitPrime logo

    GitPrime

    12
    36
    0
    Metrics for data-driven engineering leaders
    12
    36
    + 1
    0
    PROS OF GITPRIME
      Be the first to leave a pro
      CONS OF GITPRIME
        Be the first to leave a con

        related GitPrime posts

        RuboCop logo

        RuboCop

        1.1K
        216
        41
        A Ruby static code analyzer, based on the community Ruby style guide
        1.1K
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        PROS OF RUBOCOP
        • 9
          Open-source
        • 8
          Completely free
        • 7
          Runs Offline
        • 4
          Follows the Ruby Style Guide by default
        • 4
          Can automatically fix some problems
        • 4
          Customizable
        • 2
          Atom package
        • 2
          Integrates with Vim/Emacs/Atom/Sublime/
        • 1
          Integrates With Custom CMS
        CONS OF RUBOCOP
          Be the first to leave a con

          related RuboCop posts

          Francisco Quintero
          Tech Lead at Dev As Pros · | 7 upvotes · 459.5K views

          For many(if not all) small and medium size business time and cost matter a lot.

          That's why languages, frameworks, tools, and services that are easy to use and provide 0 to productive in less time, it's best.

          Maybe Node.js frameworks might provide better features compared to Rails but in terms of MVPs, for us Rails is the leading alternative.

          Amazon EC2 might be cheaper and more customizable than Heroku but in the initial terms of a project, you need to complete configurationos and deploy early.

          Advanced configurations can be done down the road, when the project is running and making money, not before.

          But moving fast isn't the only thing we care about. We also take the job to leave a good codebase from the beginning and because of that we try to follow, as much as we can, style guides in Ruby with RuboCop and in JavaScript with ESLint and StandardJS.

          Finally, comunication and keeping a good history of conversations, decisions, and discussions is important so we use a mix of Slack and Twist

          See more
          Jerome Dalbert
          Principal Backend Software Engineer at StackShare · | 6 upvotes · 643.3K views

          The continuous integration process for our Rails backend app starts by opening a GitHub pull request. This triggers a CircleCI build and some Code Climate checks.

          The CircleCI build is a workflow that runs the following jobs:

          • check for security vulnerabilities with Brakeman
          • check code quality with RuboCop
          • run RSpec tests in parallel with the knapsack gem, and output test coverage reports with the simplecov gem
          • upload test coverage to Code Climate

          Code Climate checks the following:

          • code quality metrics like code complexity
          • test coverage minimum thresholds

          The CircleCI jobs and Code Climate checks above have corresponding GitHub status checks.

          Once all the mandatory GitHub checks pass and the code+functionality have been reviewed, developers can merge their pull request into our Git master branch. Code is then ready to deploy!

          #ContinuousIntegration

          See more
          Scrutinizer logo

          Scrutinizer

          87
          65
          20
          Continuous inspection platform - improve code quality and find bugs before they hit production
          87
          65
          + 1
          20
          PROS OF SCRUTINIZER
          • 7
            Github integration / sync
          • 4
            Bitbucket integration / sync
          • 2
            Gitlab integration / sync
          • 2
            Private Git repo sync
          • 1
            Python inspection
          • 1
            Easy setup
          • 1
            Code review features
          • 1
            Coverage Report changes
          • 1
            Free for open source
          CONS OF SCRUTINIZER
          • 1
            Pricing

          related Scrutinizer posts

          JavaScript logo

          JavaScript

          350.2K
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          Lightweight, interpreted, object-oriented language with first-class functions
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          PROS OF JAVASCRIPT
          • 1.7K
            Can be used on frontend/backend
          • 1.5K
            It's everywhere
          • 1.2K
            Lots of great frameworks
          • 896
            Fast
          • 745
            Light weight
          • 425
            Flexible
          • 392
            You can't get a device today that doesn't run js
          • 286
            Non-blocking i/o
          • 236
            Ubiquitousness
          • 191
            Expressive
          • 55
            Extended functionality to web pages
          • 49
            Relatively easy language
          • 46
            Executed on the client side
          • 30
            Relatively fast to the end user
          • 25
            Pure Javascript
          • 21
            Functional programming
          • 15
            Async
          • 13
            Full-stack
          • 12
            Setup is easy
          • 12
            Its everywhere
          • 11
            JavaScript is the New PHP
          • 11
            Because I love functions
          • 10
            Like it or not, JS is part of the web standard
          • 9
            Can be used in backend, frontend and DB
          • 9
            Expansive community
          • 9
            Future Language of The Web
          • 9
            Easy
          • 8
            No need to use PHP
          • 8
            For the good parts
          • 8
            Can be used both as frontend and backend as well
          • 8
            Everyone use it
          • 8
            Most Popular Language in the World
          • 8
            Easy to hire developers
          • 7
            Love-hate relationship
          • 7
            Powerful
          • 7
            Photoshop has 3 JS runtimes built in
          • 7
            Evolution of C
          • 7
            Popularized Class-Less Architecture & Lambdas
          • 7
            Agile, packages simple to use
          • 7
            Supports lambdas and closures
          • 6
            1.6K Can be used on frontend/backend
          • 6
            It's fun
          • 6
            Hard not to use
          • 6
            Nice
          • 6
            Client side JS uses the visitors CPU to save Server Res
          • 6
            Versitile
          • 6
            It let's me use Babel & Typescript
          • 6
            Easy to make something
          • 6
            Its fun and fast
          • 6
            Can be used on frontend/backend/Mobile/create PRO Ui
          • 5
            Function expressions are useful for callbacks
          • 5
            What to add
          • 5
            Client processing
          • 5
            Everywhere
          • 5
            Scope manipulation
          • 5
            Stockholm Syndrome
          • 5
            Promise relationship
          • 5
            Clojurescript
          • 4
            Because it is so simple and lightweight
          • 4
            Only Programming language on browser
          • 1
            Hard to learn
          • 1
            Test
          • 1
            Test2
          • 1
            Easy to understand
          • 1
            Not the best
          • 1
            Easy to learn
          • 1
            Subskill #4
          • 0
            Hard 彤
          CONS OF JAVASCRIPT
          • 22
            A constant moving target, too much churn
          • 20
            Horribly inconsistent
          • 15
            Javascript is the New PHP
          • 9
            No ability to monitor memory utilitization
          • 8
            Shows Zero output in case of ANY error
          • 7
            Thinks strange results are better than errors
          • 6
            Can be ugly
          • 3
            No GitHub
          • 2
            Slow

          related JavaScript posts

          Zach Holman

          Oof. I have truly hated JavaScript for a long time. Like, for over twenty years now. Like, since the Clinton administration. It's always been a nightmare to deal with all of the aspects of that silly language.

          But wowza, things have changed. Tooling is just way, way better. I'm primarily web-oriented, and using React and Apollo together the past few years really opened my eyes to building rich apps. And I deeply apologize for using the phrase rich apps; I don't think I've ever said such Enterprisey words before.

          But yeah, things are different now. I still love Rails, and still use it for a lot of apps I build. But it's that silly rich apps phrase that's the problem. Users have way more comprehensive expectations than they did even five years ago, and the JS community does a good job at building tools and tech that tackle the problems of making heavy, complicated UI and frontend work.

          Obviously there's a lot of things happening here, so just saying "JavaScript isn't terrible" might encompass a huge amount of libraries and frameworks. But if you're like me, yeah, give things another shot- I'm somehow not hating on JavaScript anymore and... gulp... I kinda love it.

          See more
          Conor Myhrvold
          Tech Brand Mgr, Office of CTO at Uber · | 44 upvotes · 9.7M views

          How Uber developed the open source, end-to-end distributed tracing Jaeger , now a CNCF project:

          Distributed tracing is quickly becoming a must-have component in the tools that organizations use to monitor their complex, microservice-based architectures. At Uber, our open source distributed tracing system Jaeger saw large-scale internal adoption throughout 2016, integrated into hundreds of microservices and now recording thousands of traces every second.

          Here is the story of how we got here, from investigating off-the-shelf solutions like Zipkin, to why we switched from pull to push architecture, and how distributed tracing will continue to evolve:

          https://eng.uber.com/distributed-tracing/

          (GitHub Pages : https://www.jaegertracing.io/, GitHub: https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger)

          Bindings/Operator: Python Java Node.js Go C++ Kubernetes JavaScript OpenShift C# Apache Spark

          See more