If you grind LeetCode, you probably know this feeling. You open a problem, fight with it for twenty minutes, finally see the green "Accepted," feel good for a second, and then move on to the next one. The solution just sits there in the browser. You never look at it again.
Then a few months go by and your GitHub has like four commits, even though you've solved a couple hundred problems. There's no proof of any of it. No portfolio. No way to even go back and see how you solved something a month ago.
That's basically why I built Codeship.
Codeship is a browser extension paired with a dashboard. When your LeetCode solution gets accepted, it automatically pushes that solution to a GitHub repo. That's the whole idea. You don't copy paste anything, you don't create files by hand, you don't have to remember to commit later.
The flow looks like this:
You're not really doing anything different. You just keep solving problems and your GitHub fills up on its own.
The extension does the automation part, but the dashboard is where you actually see what's happening. It shows things like:
Anyone can write "solved 300+ LeetCode problems" on a resume. It doesn't really mean anything on its own. A GitHub repo that's actively growing with real, dated solutions is a lot harder to fake, and it's the kind of thing people actually click on.
Codeship just takes the work you're already doing and makes it visible without adding extra steps.
It's live right now. If you're prepping for interviews or just want a running log of everything you've solved, give it a shot.
If you try it, let me know what's missing or what would make you actually keep using it. Genuinely want the feedback.