The PyOhio contribu-palooza starts this Saturday!
http://www.pyohio.org/Contribute With two talks and a two-day-four-night
sprint, I'm very hopeful that it will recruit and train some new core
workers.
I'm preparing my portion, the teach-the-newbie (me) -to-fix-a-core-bug
session, and I want to ma
Vincent Davis wrote:
> As a wanabe Dev I think the hardest thing is to find an open issue I can
> actually fix and to have a mentor to help make sure I don't miss
> something I did not know about.
Does the "easy" tag help with that at all? It's intended to mark issues
that aren't delving into dee
On Thu, May 6, 2010 at 9:29 AM, Antoine Pitrou wrote:
>
> Scanning through open issues will also give you a general idea of what
> kind of functionalities are looking for improvement, or need fixing.
>
> (you can create a new issue and start tackling it yourself, too)
>
> As a wanabe Dev I think
Hello,
> Who lives close enough to Ohio to make it to PyOhio this summer? I want
> to use PyOhio to create new Python devs (including myself), but I need
> some existing ones to seed the process.
I'm not really answering your question (I'm very far from Ohio), but a
good way to start up withou
What an excellent idea! We should have these at *every* regional
conference.
Doug
On May 6, 2010, at 10:47 AM, Catherine Devlin wrote:
Hey, everybody... I'm Catherine, a database administrator who makes
up excuses to write Python instead.
I'm not actually here as a core developer, but as
Hey, everybody... I'm Catherine, a database administrator who makes up
excuses to write Python instead.
I'm not actually here as a core developer, but as somebody who hopes to
become a developer and recruit some more, which brings me to my question:
Who lives close enough to Ohio to make it to Py