introduction to contribution

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Introduction to Contribution WordCamp Orange Country 2012 Mike Schroder (DH-Shredder) @GetSource - http://www.getsource.net

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Introduction to Contribution talk from WordCamp Orange Country 2012. Walkthrough of how to get started with contributions to the WordPress project, common pitfalls, and suggestions to move forward. Presented by Mike Schroder (@GetSource/DH-Shredder)

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Page 1: Introduction to Contribution

Introduction to ContributionWordCamp Orange Country 2012

Mike Schroder (DH-Shredder)@GetSource - http://www.getsource.net

Page 2: Introduction to Contribution

Who Am I?

• Mike Schroder, a.k.a DH-Shredder, a.k.a. @GetSource

• Third Culture Kid, enjoy Coffee & Sailing

• WordPress Core and Plugin Contributor

• Happy DreamHost Employee

Page 3: Introduction to Contribution

If you haven’t read ...

• http://codex.wordpress.org/Contributing_to_WordPress

• Andrew Nacin’s in-progress handbook:

• http://nacin.com/projects/core-contributor-handbook/

Page 4: Introduction to Contribution

Who Contributes?• Theme Review Team

• Plugin Review Team

• Core Code

• UI/UX Group

• Support Forums

• Accessibility

• Polyglots

• .org Systems

• Mobile Applications

• Documentation

Page 5: Introduction to Contribution

I’m going to focus on Core Code

contribution.

Page 6: Introduction to Contribution

Core Team?

Page 7: Introduction to Contribution

Contributors.

Page 8: Introduction to Contribution

Contributors.

Page 9: Introduction to Contribution

OKAY.

How can I get on this list of AWESOME?

Page 10: Introduction to Contribution

Your First Contribution

Page 11: Introduction to Contribution

Release Cycle

• http://wpdevel.wordpress.com

• foreach ($releases as $release)

• Planning

• Development Cycles/Sprints

• Beta

• RC

Page 12: Introduction to Contribution

Planning:Choose the Scope.

Page 13: Introduction to Contribution

Development Cycles:Teamwork.

Page 14: Introduction to Contribution

Beta:No More Features.

Page 15: Introduction to Contribution

Release Candidate:Just the Regressions.

Page 16: Introduction to Contribution

Okay. I understand the release cycle.

What’s next?

Page 17: Introduction to Contribution

Start Small.

Page 18: Introduction to Contribution

Look for a Need.

Page 19: Introduction to Contribution

“If it’s not on Trac, it doesn’t exist.”

-Pretty much the entire Core Team.

http://core.trac.wordpress.org

Page 20: Introduction to Contribution

Reports are your friend.

• http://core.trac.wordpress.org/report

• Next Major Release:http://core.trac.wordpress.org/report/6

• Needs Patch:http://core.trac.wordpress.org/report/16

• Has Patch, Needs Testing:http://core.trac.wordpress.org/report/13

• View Tickets -> Custom Query (i.e. needs-refresh)

Page 21: Introduction to Contribution
Page 22: Introduction to Contribution

Okay. I found a bug.Now What?

• Get the WordPress.org source from trunk.

• http://codex.wordpress.org/SVN

• svn co http://core.svn.wordpress.org/trunk/

• https://github.com/WordPress/WordPress

Page 23: Introduction to Contribution

Apply the Patch, if any.

• Right-click on patch download link, copy URL

• From root of trunk:

• wget http://core.trac.wordpress.org/raw-attachment/ticket/20000/20000.diff(or curl -OL http://core ...)

• patch -p0 < 20000.diff

Page 24: Introduction to Contribution

Now, create a patch.

• Create all patches from the WordPress root within your trunk checkout.

• svn diff > bugNumber[.patchNumber].diff

• e.g. svn diff > 20000.2.diff

Page 25: Introduction to Contribution

Attach a patch.

• Attach it to the ticket.

• Add a note to the ticket, so that everyone cc’d is notified.

Page 26: Introduction to Contribution

No one has responded.What now?

Page 27: Introduction to Contribution

Bother the crowd.

Page 28: Introduction to Contribution

Learn to love IRC.#wordpress-dev on FreeNode

Page 29: Introduction to Contribution

Ask for help.

Page 30: Introduction to Contribution

Ping those who are handling your ticket!

Page 31: Introduction to Contribution

Don’t rely onwp-hackers.

Page 32: Introduction to Contribution

Twitter is your friend.

Page 33: Introduction to Contribution

Be prepared for rejection.

Page 34: Introduction to Contribution

Iteration is key.It’s okay if someone else has a

better idea.

Page 35: Introduction to Contribution

Let’s work together to make a better WordPress.