On Sun, Mar 9, 2014 at 8:14 PM, Philippe Ombredanne <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sun, Mar 9, 2014 at 4:23 AM, ahi <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello Ahmed! > Thank you for your interest in SPDX. > What else can you tell us about you?
Hello Philippe, Well I am currently on my 8th semester of a 10 semester program. I usually like to code in C++ and Python, with the occasional dash of Go or Prolog. Most of my work so far has been university related, a personal goal of mine is to start contributing to open source development. I am hoping GSOC will provide me with contacts in open source communities so that I may continue contributing. I enjoy listening to deadmau5 or Daft Punk especially while coding. My general broad areas of interest are AI, Compilers, formal language theory and Networking. > Now which language would you have in mind? > Hint: Java is already covered. > My choices would be Python, Go, JavaScript and Ruby in this order. Well I had C++ originally in mind, but I am also considering Python. Which one would benefit the community the most? They are both widely used languages. On Sun, Mar 9, 2014 at 10:29 PM, Jeremiah Foster <[email protected]> wrote: > Are there examples, i.e. complete files, with headers, etc. that are > available for the 1.2 and 2.0 formats? I can find some snippets available > but nothing that shows me what a complete SPDX file would look like. Regarding 1.2 the spec is available on spdx.org and the SPDX-Tools GitHub repo has example files and a Java parser. The 2.0 spec is still a work in progress, it has a page on the SPDX wiki. -- Best Regards, Ahmed _______________________________________________ Spdx-tech mailing list [email protected] https://lists.spdx.org/mailman/listinfo/spdx-tech
