On 02/26/2014 08:48 PM, Junio C Hamano wrote: > Michael Haggerty <mhagger@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > >> See my branch on GitHub [1] or read the appended text below. > > Very nice. > >> ## Introduction >> >> It is strongly recommended that students who want to apply to the Git >> project for the Summer of Code 2014 should submit a small code-related >> patch to the Git project as part of their application. Think of these >> microprojects as the "Hello, world" of getting involved with the Git >> project; the coding aspect of the change can be almost trivial, but to >> make the change the student has to become familiar with many of the >> practical aspects of working on the Git project: > > I'd suggest one step before all of the below. > > * Here (http://thread.gmane.org/{TBD1,TBD2,TBD3...}) are a sample > set of threads that show how a change and a patch to implement it > is proposed by a developer X, the problem it attempts to solve, > the design of the proposed solution and the implementation of > that design are reviewed and discussed, and that after several > iterations it resulted in inclusion to our codebase. As a GSoC > student, you will be playing the role of X and engaging in a > similar discussion. Get familar with the flow, need for clarity > on both sides (i.e. you need to clearly defend your design, and > need to ask clarifications when questions/suggestions you are > offered are not clear enough), the pace at which the discussion > takes place, and the general tone of the discussion, to learn > what is expected of you. > > That would help the later step, namely: > >> * Expect feedback, criticism, suggestions, etc. from the mailing list. >> >> *Respond to it!* and follow up with improved versions of your >> change. Even for a trivial patch you shouldn't be surprised if it >> takes two or more iterations before your patch is accepted. *This >> is the best part of the Git community; it is your chance to get >> personalized instruction from very experienced peers!* Sounds good. I suggest we make your blob a paragraph before the list of bullet points rather than part of the list. Please suggest some "TBD*" then I'll add it to the text. Would we also fill in "X" with the name of the actual student involved in the conversation that is pointed to? Michael -- Michael Haggerty mhagger@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://softwareswirl.blogspot.com/ -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe git" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html