I have found it worthwhile myself. If you'd like to see what last year's conference was like, here's the schedule: https://openedx2018.sched.com/
The documentation for edX is very good at the student and course creator level, but not good for someone trying to work with the code. I find myself doing a lot of searching when I dig through the source. On Thursday, December 6, 2018 at 5:49:27 PM UTC-5, John Mark wrote: > > Hi, > > If you're new to Open edX development, I think the first day will be > especially useful - that's when we'll have the in-depth tutorials and > workshops, much of which will be focused on developement as well as devops. > > There will be interesting stuff in the main conference, too - for > developers, you'll learn about new integrations, product direction, and > there will be a developer summit on the last day, all about collaborating > on current works in progress. > > I'm biased, but I think it's a good event to attend :) > > As for technical documentation - I assume you've seen what's available on > readthedocs.org? http://docs.edx.org/ > > -JM > > > > On Thursday, December 6, 2018 at 9:28:04 AM UTC-5, Puggi Vazquez wrote: >> >> Hello, >> >> I am new to Open Edx and like to know as a developer trying to implement >> and customize Open Edx. Is it worth it the expense to go to the 2019 >> Conference? >> >> Also would like to know where can I find technical documentation, for >> example what classes and functions are en-charge of enrollment or what >> functions are en-charge of listing course information etc... >> > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "General Open edX discussion" group. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/edx-code/e101c08c-b281-4985-b651-766f86f2ba09%40googlegroups.com.
