Hello,
Important: my mailer has a problem and does randomly introduce spaces
un URL. Just to inform you ;-)
Le 25 août 08 à 21:32, Pradipta Ghosh a écrit :
Hi
I am using Open Office since 2004. Now I am interested to
contribute in devolopment of OOo to face some real life challanges.
I have completed B.tech in Computer Science & Engg this year.My
skill sets are--- C, C++ and little bit of Java, python.
Looks like you have very good skills for OpenOffice.org Project. Be
welcome !
Please help me to find out, Which project is best suited for me......
I honestly think _you_ only have the answer. What I'd like to explain
you, is OpenOffice.org source code is an ocean of code, and before to
start with something in particular, you'll have to discover a lot of
things, understand how source code is organized, .. etc.
waiting for your king suggestion.....
I just will provide you several links, and then you'll have more
information for your future choice :
1) OpenOffice.org wiki the central point to find information :
http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Main_Page
2) Development entry point on the wiki : http://
wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/
Main_Page#Getting_started_with_OOo_development
3) Education Project: Education Project, who aims to welcome students
and find new developpers : http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/
Education_Project
Our resources are limited, but In the last one, you'll find
simplified ClassRooms ( under IRC logs ), who aim to present one
different topic every time :
=> http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Education_ClassRoom/
Previous_Logs
The topics above have been presented by some developers ( GSL
project, Framework Proejct .. and so on ) and IMHO this is the place
where discover more precisely how things are organized inside both
OpenOffice.org Project and in the source code.
For students, there is an Effort started, where you will find little
applications ( subjects adapted to students), who should help you to
understand more about OpenOffice.org source code : => http://
wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Education_Project/Effort
4) IRC
We use IRC a lot to communicate, and you can find most of the
channels on irc.freenode.net server. ( #dev.openoffice.org,
#education.openoffice.org , ..etc )
The complete list or IRC channel is located: http://
wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/IRC
As you can see, the list is long, and the most simple, is : read,
read .. and ask questions.
Hope this will help you :-)
Regards,
Eric Bachard
--
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