On 14/03/13 21:07, till plewe wrote:
> I would also be willing to help coding (I can code in most languages
> but have never used Tcl/Tk  seriously). What stopped me so far were
> limited time and the fact that I could not decide which scid version
> to start with. Limited time still applies so I would prefer tasks
> which do not require to be intimately acquainted with the entire code
> base.

A good starting place in any project is any bugs or misfeatures or 
lacking features that annoy you.

If that doesn't inspire you, take a look at the list of unfixed bugs. In 
too many projects, developers get carried away with the fantastical new 
features they want to implement, but don't bother with boring bug 
bashing. Bashing bugs is important, it goes very far to keeping your 
users happy.

You could also take a look at the build process, it seems SCID has 
always had its own build process, but most free software development 
projects use automake and its friends. If you use Linux, it's really 
easy to use your package manager to install them. On Windows you could 
have a look at cygwin.


-- 
Santa

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