Tyler Feickert is a software engineer with a decade of experience building full-stack web applications and developer tools, now based in Philadelphia. He transitioned from Node.js/React web development to becoming a core maintainer of Truffle at ConsenSys, contributing to the CLI, smart contract workflows, and documentation for a widely used Ethereum developer suite. Tyler thrives in open-source ecosystems where transparency and community collaboration drive product decisions, and he has hands-on experience resolving merge conflicts, improving deploy/test commands, and expanding documentation like ENS pages. His background in mathematics informs a pragmatic, detail-oriented approach to debugging and tooling design. Colleagues describe him as someone who enjoys making developer workflows more predictable and accessible—often by simplifying command flags and edge-case behaviors that frustrate everyday users.
10 years of coding experience
7 years of employment as a software developer
Web Development, Web Development at LEARN Academy
Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) Mathematics, Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) Mathematics at James Madison University
:warning: The Truffle Suite is being sunset. For information on ongoing support, migration options and FAQs, visit the Consensys blog. Thank you for all the support over the years.
Role in this project:
Full-stack Developer (Smart Contract & Frontend)
Contributions:59 releases, 921 reviews, 2968 commits in 4 years 5 months
Contributions summary:Tyler contributed significantly to the Truffle Suite, focusing on updates to module calls and incorporating features for test and deploy commands. Their contributions included adding a compileNone option for the test command, adding the --compile-none flag to the migrate command documentation, and modifying the JavaScript code. These changes demonstrate the user's work with both the Solidity smart contracts and the command line interface.
Contributions:92 reviews, 222 commits, 126 PRs in 4 years 5 months
Contributions summary:Tyler primarily contributed to the website's content and structure. They updated TruffleCon 2018 and 2019 pages, merging changes and resolving conflicts. Their work included modifying the Truffle Boxes layout and adding a new page for Ethereum Name Service documentation. These updates reflect a focus on maintaining and expanding the website's information architecture.
ethereumreactweb3
Find and Hire Top DevelopersWe’ve analyzed the programming source code of over 60 million software developers on GitHub and scored them by 50,000 skills. Sign-up on Prog,AI to search for software developers.