Power Query formula language (also known as M language) is a very capable yet not very flexible tool. It lacks some features taken for granted by developers who are used to other programming languages such as compatibility with version control systems, extensibility by third-party libraries, etc.

That is why I have started LibPQ - an open-source M language library meant to expand the standard library and to make it easier for others to do so. Its main features are:

LibPQ stores its modules as plain text files with *.pq extension. Detaching source code from the workbooks that execute it has a lot of advantages:

The source code can be managed by version control system such as git

Multiple workbooks referring to the same module will always use the same (latest) code

It encourages splitting your code into smaller reusable units

You can edit the source code with any editor you like (autocompletion and syntax highlighting are nice features even though Power Query's Advanced Editor does not have them)

Sharing your code and collaborating becomes much easier

LibPQ does not dictate where you store your source code. Inspired by Python's sys.path it enables specifying unlimited number of local and/or remote sources (ordered by priority). When importing a module, LibPQ will check these sources one by one until the required module is found.

Having source code detached from the workbooks encourages you to improve and refactor existing modules. To make sure you do not introduce regressions you should cover your code with unit tests.

There are no unit testing tools in standard library, but LibPQ offers a basic unit testing framework that supports test discovery, grouping tests into test suites and comes with a bunch of handy assertion functions. To learn more read this help page.

And last, LibPQ contains some general purpose modules that you might find useful. If not - go write some new ones, you have the tools now!

LibPQ is built in such way that you do not need me (or anyone else) to approve of your work. Save your code to any convenient location, and LibPQ will help you to import it into your workbooks. You can even keep your modules private, no pressure here. Have fun and enjoy your coding!