Sure, we try to tag issues as "easy" that don't need a lot of
familiarity with the codebase.
On 8/31/2015 7:13 PM, Pieter de Jong wrote:
OK -
I would like to start with tasks that allow me to get familiar with
(parts of) the code base,
conventions, tests and so on. Eventually, I would like to work on
algorithms and applied mathematics aspects.
Does that make sense?
On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 12:43 PM, Andreas Mueller <t3k...@gmail.com
<mailto:t3k...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi Pieter.
Please keep this kind of discussions on the mailing list.
Any single contributor might be busy.
All the easy and "need contributor" issues are great places to
start to get you familiar with the library.
Is there something particular that interests you?
Best,
Andy
On 08/31/2015 02:48 PM, Pieter de Jong wrote:
Hi Andreas,
I hope to contribute to scikit-learn in the near+medium future*,
and am following the instructions at
http://scikit-learn.org/stable/developers/ . I've looked through
this list:
( * In fact, I hope to make my first commit asap and get to 10
commits at least within this year.)
https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/issues?q=is%3Aopen+is%3Aissue+label%3AEasy
and found some good issues, but no obvious place where I could
start to contribute.
So I figured I'd email a to contributor - perhaps you can tell me
where contributions are most needed and what would be a good
place to start, so you can focus on higher-level tasks?
Thanks,
Pieter
http://linkedin.com/in/pieteradejong
https://twitter.com/pieteradejong
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
_______________________________________________
Scikit-learn-general mailing list
Scikit-learn-general@lists.sourceforge.net
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/scikit-learn-general