Programming & Data
- Languages, notebooks, and analysis tools you use regularly.
- Data modelling, transformation, statistics, or experimentation.
- Clear code, reproducible work, and useful documentation.
Role / Specialty • Location
Introduce yourself in three or four sentences. Explain your background, the type of work you do, and the problems you like solving. Keep this section human and specific rather than trying to list everything from your CV.
Add a short note on your education, career path, or point of view. This template works well when the site is positioned as a portfolio of public projects, writing, and learning resources rather than a full CV.
Featured project demo
Replace this panel with a video embed, screenshot, or live demo link.Optional featured demo. Replace this block, or remove it if you do not need a video.
Describe the problem, the approach, and the outcome in two or three sentences. Focus on what someone can understand quickly.
Use the project cards for public work, learning projects, case studies, or polished examples that represent your interests.
A concise card is often better than a long description. Give readers enough context to decide whether to click through.
Use this section for connected projects that tell a bigger story: extraction, transformation, documentation, reporting, or deployment. It is useful when several repositories form one end-to-end workflow.
Describe the modelled layer, the business questions it supports, and the quality checks that make it trustworthy.
Describe how raw data is collected, stored, retried, logged, or prepared for downstream modelling.
Link to a dashboard, notebook, report, or write-up that makes the project understandable to a wider audience.
Add starter repositories, guides, templates, or write-ups that someone else can clone, run, and adapt.
A practical guide for setting up a toolchain, environment, or repeatable workflow.
A small template that shows how to call an API, keep secrets out of source control, and structure an example project.
A static template or starter project that others can fork and customise for their own work.
Summarise the topics you write about and the kind of reader you write for.
Use this card for a thesis, paper, essay, conference talk, or long-form technical explanation.
Link to learning materials, workshops, tutoring notes, or examples you have made public.
If your work is public and useful to others, you can include an optional support link here.
Buy me a coffeeRemove this section if support links are not relevant to your portfolio.