-People can stump on very small things, upon installing a project for instance.
With a few experts providing guidance on the spot, those problems 'go away'.
Real world has a much higher bandwidth
-Collaboration can be of short length, say 3 hours or just an evening, and for those short term collaborations the overhead might simply be too much. In 3 hours one can do a lot of things, for instance testing installation on different platforms and reporting bugs. Things that, without some social context or additional interest, would be quite a pain. ( especially if the original author of a library has done a significant effort already on non trivial things!)
From a community perspective it is also less intimidating for beginners than diving into a hard subject by themselves (who said 'handbook of automated reasoning' ? :) ) and promotes an active attitude over tutorials.
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I like the idea of having a list of open projects as this makes the information flow from project to contributors.
I wonder what is the best form for this idea, as it might be not dynamic enough.
May be integrating :
- a web page 'community sprint' with a theme being displayed in advance which leads to
- a physical meeting
- plus a chat (or google hangout), integrated on the github pages of the project being worked on, for people not physically present but who want to contribute as well
Hi Nicolas,
Thanks for organizing this! It sounds like an excellent initiative and I would definitely love to come (I think meeting in person when collaborating on projects is really useful). London sounds good to me – there are many F#ers in London and it is easy to get there from Cambridge, Oxford (and Ely :-)) too. I will be away on the first weekend of Feb, but otherwise I’m free (filled the Doodle) and would love to come.
I think there is a lot of interesting projects that could be done around Open Source Editor/Integration. This includes working on MonoDevelop and emacs integration, but also making this available as a web service (for tools like www.fssnip.net and www.fsnotebook.net), which is something I discussed briefly with Tim (author of F# Notebook) and Phil.
Another (related) project would be creating hostable F# interactive, which is a something that quite a few people ask about and should not be too hard (again, this could also wrapped in an easy to use web service). Tim even designed a mockup for the possible API: http://docs.fsnotebook.apiary.io
Another project I had a lot of fun with is https://github.com/ZachBray/FunScript. We did some coding on this with Zach (while not listening at a F# user group meeting J) and I think it is very clean project and a one that is easy to contribute to.
T.
On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 7:48 AM, Nicolas <nicolas...@gmail.com> wrote:
> We'll probably have to print out a recommended 'tool stack' to streamline
> dev.
Generally a good idea, I think, although being *too* prescriptive can
put people off. At least having good recommendations and how to get
them working can be helpful.
> I'd imagine
> - mono as target platform, as we try to integrate into OSS
> - git for source control
Seems pretty standard to use github at the moment.
> - nuget for dependency management
I haven't used nuget, does it work on Mono/OSX? My googling says no at
the moment.
> - fake for builds
I haven't used fake either, but would like to see what it can do. At
the moment, `xbuild project.fsproj` does the job for me, as I don't
have any more complex requirements. I saw that it can integrate calls
to msbuild/xbuild.
> - Formatting for documentation
I think the Formatting output is very nice. As we all know, people
tend to prefer coding to documenting, but if Formatting makes it
easier to produce documentation that can only be a good thing (I think
there should be documentation, just to be clear).
What is the next sprint about ?
The majority has spoken !
The next sprint, will be held on Saturday 9th of february 2013 starting from 10am ! It will focus on helping out with
Open source editor integration
This is the occasion for you to get real and hands-on with F#, learn from the bests, and be enabled to author and contribute to F#
On small glitch is that Google's place is already booked that date !
Please watch in here or on the open source f# google group for update on the place.
We are learning and asked if they can supply a updated calendar in the future. Meanwhile we are looking for a place for around 5-10 people (the first sprint will be limited but everyone is welcome) ideally halfway between Padington and Kings Cross, in order to accomodate for all. Suggestion/Booking welcome !
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Fyi, the code sprint now displayed under the Functional Londoners meetup page---Thanks Robin for the directions on fsharpbinding :That participates to focusing and streamlining our efforts.Everyone who already knows about the library / wants to share directions / his experience is welcome to contribute on this matter.
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