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As the skills of software development become more accessible, and code is making its way into the hands of more and more team members, it is increasingly popular to include development environments directly in your web applications.
There’s a great chance that your customers could benefit from code-level customization in your platform, and that you might want to build features like those listed above. Building a cloud IDE can be daunting, but the Deno Subhosting API simplifies that process by allowing you to programmatically deploy and run code within seconds on Deno Deploy’s globally distributed V8 isolate cloud.
Today, we invite you to learn more about the capabilities of Deno Subhosting by participating in our Deno Subhosting Hackathon, where you will be challenged to either build your own cloud IDE or integrate a cloud IDE into your existing product.
To submit a project for the hackathon, you must build a browser-based IDE that executes JavaScript or TypeScript code using the Subhosting API. Your project can be either:
When you have built an application that matches this description, please submit it here and include the following key information:
Note that all projects must successfully run code on Deno Subhosting infrastructure. For existing projects that have added a cloud IDE, we will also accept a video demo in lieu of a demoable URL.
We will accept submissions until 12pm noon Pacific Time on Thursday, January 18th. We’ll announce winners Friday, January 19th.
There are plenty of great cloud based IDEs out there, some meant for specific purposes such as CodePen for frontends and Val.town for serverless JavaScript functions, to more general ones like Repl.it or GitPod. Then there are IDEs built into SaaS products like Salesforce’s code builder that allows developers to extend its features. Regardless of their purpose, the streamlined development experience of these IDEs enables you to skip configuration and dive right into prototyping.
Here are some examples that we believe can be built within the scope of this hackathon.
Whatever you build, it will need to take code from a browser and run it with the Subhosting API. We can’t wait to see how creative you can get with this prompt.
Here are links and resources to help you get started.
Additionally, we are hosting a live code stream on Thursday, January 11th, at 11am PT, where we’ll show you the first steps to building your own Cloud IDE with the Subhosting IDE template. We plan to transcribe this into a written tutorial for the blog shortly afterwards.
Over the coming days, we’ll announce more resources to share some tips and
tricks. Join our Discord and update your role to
include events to stay in the loop!
We’ll reward prizes based on the following categories.
All winners will receive $100 gift card for Deno Merch.
Thank you all for participating and congratulations to the winners below! Here are the winners for each category.
Deno Blocks is a visual code editor in your browser that allows you to drag and drop pieces to write code. It’s built with Fresh and Blockly. Check out their video demo here.

DenoCode is a cloud editor that gives you the option of using ChatGPT to generate code on your behalf. It’s built with Firebase auth, OpenAI, SvelteKit, and Monaco. View their video demo here.

deco.play, aside from being a CMS that uses a robust in-browser code editor, uses AI to create a Preact component based off a screenshot of a website that you can upload. This app was built with Fresh, Tailwind, and GPT Assistant. View their video demo here.

Ryan reviewed the submissions and said his favorite is Deno Blocks.
Congratulations and the Deno team will be in touch with prize information!
Missed this hackathon?
There will be more! Stay in the loop by following our Twitter or joining our Discord.
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