Thanks for the help Daniel. I'll check out both of the links you sent and will see if I can figure out what to after that.
Landon On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 8:07 AM, Daniel Gong <daniel.gong.fu...@gmail.com> wrote: > You can see what the community is doing and has already done in JIRA [1]. > > However, I think if you are very new to harmony, it's better that you take a > look at the harmony wiki [2] first so that you can get deeper understanding > of the project and the community, although I supposed that some of the TODO > information in wiki might be out of time. > > By the way, I'm sort of new bee to harmony too (I got to know the community > two years ago but has not got deep enough understanding of harmony and not > contributed much yet) and I'm also a pure java developer. We can more > discussion about contribution to harmony :) > > [1] https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HARMONY > [2] http://wiki.apache.org/harmony/ > > Best wishes > Daniel Gong > > > On Tue, Nov 16, 2010 at 11:30 PM, Sunburned Surveyor < > sunburned.surve...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Thanks Daniel and Regis for the information about Apache Harmony. >> >> I'll see if I can get the source code for the class library downloaded >> today and I will begin looking at the java.util modules. Is there a >> task list for the work that needs to be done in the class library or a >> person that supervises this work? >> >> Thank you again for the direction. >> >> SS >> >> On Mon, Nov 15, 2010 at 11:06 PM, Regis <xu.re...@gmail.com> wrote: >> > On 2010-11-16 4:46, Sunburned Surveyor wrote: >> >> >> >> I'd like to know if any components of the Harmony Project are being >> >> implemented in Java. Are any of the class libraries that will ship >> >> with the JVM being written in Java? >> >> >> >> Is the main JVM implemented in C? >> >> >> >> I'm just trying to figure out where I might contribute code to the >> >> project as a Java programmer. My C programming skills are very crude. >> >> >> >> Thanks, >> >> >> >> The Sunburned Surveyor >> >> >> > >> > >> > Harmony Project could divide to three part: VM, class library and jdk >> tools. >> > >> > VM is mainly implemented in C/C++ and a few Java code >> > The most of class library code is written in Java, and a few C code to >> deal >> > with file system and network etc. If you are a pure Java programmer, >> class >> > library is a good place to start, I suggest you to start from jndi, sql, >> > beans, java.util modules, they are pure Java code. >> > >> > -- >> > Best Regards, >> > Regis. >> > >> >