Hi All,
I'm in a situation similar to Omer so I thought I'd join this thread. Your
answers are helpful for me too, thanks.

I worked with netbeans few years back and I'd like to use it more again.
Maybe help with a few smaller things, maybe stuff that new users see first
etc...

My question is when you create a task for yourself in Jira (or find an old
one that you wanted to work on), then *who and how* decides *if* it is OK
to do it and *how* to do it?
If it is an obvious bug I guess you can just fix it and make a PR, but what
if some functionality can be implemented in more than one way or a design
decision is needed? Or maybe that change is not wanted? How does this work?

I guess it will be the best to just ask here, right?

Regards
Premek






On Wed, Mar 17, 2021 at 10:01 AM Bertrand Delacretaz <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Hi,
>
> On Wed, Mar 17, 2021 at 5:08 AM Brad Walker <[email protected]> wrote:
> ...
> > 3 - create your bug report in Jira
> > 4 - implement your change/feature
> ...
>
> FWIW, some projects label existing jira tickets as "low-hanging fruit"
> or "good first issue".
>
> I think that's a good way for volunteers to get started and it helps
> regular contributors "offload" those issues to more people.
>
> -Bertrand
>
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