I was thinking about holding a Patch Review Party/Sprint, which would provide people unfamiliar with the Python dev process a way to contribute to the project and get familiar with running tests, applying patches and so forth. I have a list of easy-ish patches that I wanted to take a look at and I could expand that and use those as a starting for people who don't have any particular bug tracker issues in mind. I'm not a patch review guru by any means, though. Also not sure if this is a good idea or if this is just late night caffeine talking.
2016-04-28 20:07 GMT+01:00 Brett Cannon <br...@python.org>: > No one stepped forward to lead the sprints this year, so I will put myself > as the sprint leader and lean on everyone else who appears to help. :) > > > On Tue, 5 Apr 2016 at 09:36 Brett Cannon <br...@python.org> wrote: > >> The call has started to go out for sprint groups to list themselves >> online. Anyone want to specifically lead the core sprint this year? If no >> one specifically does then I will sign us up and do my usual thing of >> pointing people at the devguide and encourage people to ask questions but >> not do a lot of hand-holding (I'm expecting to be busy either working on >> GitHub migration stuff or doing other things that I have been neglecting >> due to my GitHub migration work). >> >> ---------- Forwarded message --------- >> From: Ewa Jodlowska <e...@python.org> >> Date: Mon, 4 Apr 2016 at 07:14 >> Subject: [PSF-Community] Sprinting at PyCon US 2016 >> To: <psf-commun...@python.org> >> >> >> Are you coming to PyCon US? Have you thought about sprinting? >> >> The coding Sprints are the hidden gem of PyCon, up to 4 days (June 2-5) >> of coding with many Python projects and their maintainers. And if you're >> coming to PyCon, taking part in the Sprints is easy! >> >> You don’t need to change your registration* to join the Sprints. There’s >> no additional registration fee, and you even get lunch. You do need to >> cover the additional lodging and other meals, but that’s it. If you’ve >> booked a room through the PyCon registration system, you'll need to contact >> the registration team at pycon2...@cteusa.com as soon as possible to >> request the extra nights. The sprinting itself (along with lunch every day) >> is free, so your only expenses are your room and other meals. >> >> If you're interested in what projects will be sprinting, just keep an eye >> on the sprints page on the PyCon web site at >> https://us.pycon.org/2016/community/sprints/ Be sure to check back, as >> groups are being added all the time. >> >> If you haven't sprinted before, or if you just need to brush up on >> sprinting tools and techniques, there will again be an 'Intro to Sprinting' >> session the evening of June 1, lead by Shauna Gordon-McKeon and other >> members of Python community. To grab a free ticket for this session, just >> visit >> https://www.eventbrite.com/e/introduction-to-open-source-the-pycon-sprints-tickets-22435151141 >> . >> >> *Please note that conference registration is sold out, but you do not >> need a conference registration to come to the Sprints. >> >> _______________________________________________ >> PSF-Community mailing list >> psf-commun...@python.org >> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/psf-community >> > > _______________________________________________ > Python-Dev mailing list > Python-Dev@python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev > Unsubscribe: > https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/camillamon%40gmail.com > >
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