you *are* crying. Look there are really 3 ways to get seriously into
the codebase.
No, I am not. Trust me.
1- Go dig bugs. You can't imagine the number that still come out of the
blue saying bug here, fixed. JBoss is not a magical whole with a
magic formula where TADA you know it all. It
: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
micael
Sent: Thursday, August 15, 2002 2:11 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [JBoss-dev] Recruiting new developers
I think that sometimes people do not see the effort a newbie has put into
something, because putting yourself
PROTECTED] [mailto:jboss-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of marc fleury
Sent: Wednesday, August 14, 2002 5:13 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [JBoss-dev] Recruiting new developers
sites, but know little about JBoss. I came here to learn
about a year ago
but left, not feeling
Micael,
I started on JBoss about a year and a half ago and there was almost no
usable documentation, so I just read the code. It is very simple and
fairly logical (except mine :) ).
Are you interested in working on some part of the server? If you are,
send me a email and I'll tell you
Another (additional) way would be to provide snappy and easy to read
introductions to the basic code layout in JBoss. I am a Java Certified
Programmer, so I know a little about Java, and I have coded many large
sites, but know little about JBoss. I came here to learn about a year ago
but
sites, but know little about JBoss. I came here to learn
about a year ago
but left, not feeling welcome. Not crying, just letting you
know. I have
you *are* crying. Look there are really 3 ways to get seriously into
the codebase.
1- Go dig bugs. You can't imagine the number that
I think that sometimes people do not see the effort a newbie has put into
something, because putting yourself into their place is also difficult, and
is not so urgent, i.e. their pain is not your pain. I paid to get
documentation that turned out to be a work in progress and have never
really