Ok, I understand. I've written parsers both as part of CS classes and in previous jobs, so I don't think this is outside my alley. I will go ahead and get Nepomuk built and patch one of the bugs to prove my worth.
I have done some work on KDE in the past so that shouldn't be too hard at all. I can provide code samples also if you would like that. They might not be in C++ though, since I tend to write parsers in functional languages for class, but the ideas are the same. As for C++, I have lots of code in C and C++, but the best examples are probably from some of my operating systems code. Thanks, Matthew McKeen On Thursday, April 11, 2013 07:00:38 PM Vishesh Handa wrote: Hey Matthew On Tue, Apr 9, 2013 at 12:58 PM, Matthew McKeen <[email protected][1]> wrote: Hey All: I just had an idea for a GSOC project today that might interest you. Wouldn't it be cool to have a visualization plasmoid for the data relationships that exist in Nepomuk. I was thinking a 3D graph visualization, maybe even making nodes clickable such that data can be navigated in a incredible new way. Nepomuk offers power that no desktop really has, and I think a cool new way to use that power could be a great addition to KDE. Eventually we could make these kinds of views a part of dolphin and offer a new way to navigate files. The idea seems nice, but right now, at least for Google Summer of code, I rather focus on directly usable improvements that can easily be integrated within existing applications. That being said, it does sound quiet interesting. I'll be happy to help you in implementing this, if you want to do so. But not as a google summer of code project (or soc). We're very short on mentors for Nepomuk, and I don't think I can take more than 1 student this year. If this doesn't fit the fancy of you guys, I am also happy to take on a proper rewrite of the Nepomuk query parser. I could probably even fit this work into my summer of coding, as it shouldn't take too long to rewrite that parser. Seeing that some other students have been taking over my other ideas, I thought that this idea might be a little more fresh and a good thing to base my proposal on, which I plan to draft soon. You might want to setup a KDE development environment and maybe look at some junior jobs and other tasks [1] I like to asses a student's coding capability before taking them on, no matter how good their proposal is. [1] http://community.kde.org/Projects/Nepomuk#Gettings_Stared[2] What does the community think? Thanks, Matthew McKeen University of California, Los Angeles [email protected][1] [email protected][3] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/nepomuk[4] Vishesh Handa -------- [1] mailto:[email protected] [2] http://community.kde.org/Projects/Nepomuk#Gettings_Stared [3] mailto:[email protected] [4] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/nepomuk
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