Because I am in a presentation, not supposed to be online writing emails at all LOL

http://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ESME-59

/Anne

On 23. april. 2009, at 16.40, Richard Hirsch wrote:

why don't you include the Jira link in the thread

D.

On Thu, Apr 23, 2009 at 4:34 PM, Anne Kathrine Petteroe
<[email protected]>wrote:

I think documenting the current code should be on top of our list.
I have created a task in Jira for it.

/Anne



On 22. april. 2009, at 08.48, Richard Hirsch wrote:

I actually tried to do some Scala work in ESME but without documentation I
was lost pretty fast.

D.

On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 10:11 PM, Vassil Dichev <[email protected]>
wrote:

Does anyone have suggestions, how Apache ESME can use this interest to
increase its community?


I think the best part is that we don't need to do anything different
than what we have to do anyway :)

I have a few ideas:

- A guide to how to use ESME to learn Scala -- (@Vassil - do you have
ideas?)


Popularity surge or not, this might be a good idea; of course it has
to be adapted to ESME's concepts.

- A few tips to try out on a local ESME installation to learn Scala.
"Hello World" experience with ESME.


A very interesting idea would be to use different components from ESME to create e.g. a Twitter bot; some of the code from ESME actions was
initially reused by a standalone bot which feeds items into ESME.

- Better documentation in our existing Scala code (look here for a

better

example -


http://scala-tools.org/mvnsites/liftweb/lift-amqp/scaladocs/net/liftweb/amqp/AMQPDispatcher.scala.html
),

so that beginners have an idea what we are doing in our code base.


- More PR work to point people to the Apache ESME site.


Absolutely- but I feel before we need to point hordes of potential
developers to our site, we should have something more presentable :( maybe not a requirement for a motivated developer if they see promise,
but nevertheless finding out easily how to get started could come a
long way.




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