That's fairly difficult to predict. Nothing about your skill map has
anything unique to open source.
I suggest you pick Sugarizer, Sugar, or Music Blocks. Identify the
software license in whatever you have picked.
Then read the license, and if English is not your first language read
a translati
Thanks, I'll check them out.
On Thu, Feb 22, 2024, 11:11 AM Mukund Choudhary 21bcs055 <
21bcs...@smvdu.ac.in> wrote:
> I think you should start by exploring the github page for sugar-labs (
> https://github.com/sugarlabs/GSoC?tab=readme-ov-file) and do read the
> README.md which you'll find in th
I think you should start by exploring the github page for sugar-labs (
https://github.com/sugarlabs/GSoC?tab=readme-ov-file) and do read the
README.md which you'll find in there. It turned out to be quite helpful for
me.
On Thu, Feb 22, 2024 at 10:58 AM Vinay Tambey
wrote:
> Thank you for the cl
Thank you for the clarification.
How do I start contributing to the Sugar Labs software as this is my
first-time to open-source ?
On Thu, Feb 22, 2024, 12:50 AM James Cameron wrote:
> Of the Sugar Labs software, nothing uses Java, Sugarizer uses HTML, CSS
> and JavaScript, and Sugar uses Python
Of the Sugar Labs software, nothing uses Java, Sugarizer uses HTML, CSS and
JavaScript, and Sugar uses Python. I'm not sure if anything uses MERN.
Open source contribution is that your new code is written by you and you either
assign copyright during commit, or you retain copyright and give it
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