Almaz S is a backend-focused software engineer with five years of experience building and improving production-grade Python and Rust projects while also handling DevOps tasks. Based in Kazan, he contributes to well-known open-source projects such as google/yapf and wemake-services repositories, where his work emphasizes refactoring, code quality and performance optimizations. He has practical experience applying security and deployment improvements—like static file precompression and sensible server defaults—alongside routine backend development. His contributions show a consistent pattern of simplifying complex logic, replacing imperative constructs with more idiomatic expressions and improving maintainability. Almaz has balanced freelance development with roles in industry, including data engineering and a current specialist position at a major special economic zone, demonstrating adaptability across environments. Notably, he also adds internationalization support to Rust projects, indicating attention to global-ready software.
HTTP, SOCKS4, SOCKS5 proxies scraper and checker with rich functionality.
Role in this project:
Back-end Developer
Contributions:105 commits, 143 PRs, 776 pushes in 11 months
Contributions summary:Almaz primarily contributed to improving the codebase of the proxy scraper and checker. They focused on enhancing existing functionality, including improvements to the regex used for proxy extraction, and improving the quality of the code by adding comments and better formatting. The user also added support for additional proxy sources, and implemented improvements to errors output, and the overall output format.
🚀Memory safe, blazing fast, configurable, minimal hello world written in rust(🚀) in a few lines of code with few(1247🚀) dependencies🚀
Role in this project:
Localization / Internationalization Specialist
Contributions:15 commits, 10 PRs, 9 comments in 1 month
Contributions summary:Almaz primarily focused on adding and modifying language support within the "hello-world.rs" project, specifically including Russian, and extending the supported locales. Their contributions involved modifying the main application file to integrate internationalization using the `r_i18n` crate. Additionally, the user appears to have addressed build errors and fixed issues related to the inclusion of a large number of supported languages and their corresponding translations. These changes likely involved adjusting code and dependencies to accommodate the expanded language support.
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