Tiks izdzēsta lapa "Newbie-Guide"
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Everything new members might want right off the bat.
Basically there are four essentials freedoms everyone should have with the software they use to do their computing:
So just make sure you have these freedoms with the software you use and that your users have these freedoms if you make software (whenever possible). That way you'll (generally) be doing what's best for yourself and your community.
For shorthand, we call software that respects your freedom libre, free or open source. Software that doesn't is called proprietary or closed source.
Where things get complicated is dealing with edge cases (what is your computing, what is software) and having a solid applied ethics to rest this idea on. In fact, there is a big ethics rabbit hole you can jump into on the philosophy page.
Our mission isn't complete until Miami is a libre utopia. That means everyone can be their best selves without needing to use proprietary software and great work is being done in libre software all the time.
These guides will sculpt you into a libre champ.
Since copyright law by default restricts users, a license is needed in order to counteract this.
There are two types: copyleft and permissive. Permissive licenses allows the user to make the software proprietary, and copyleft licenses do not. Licenses we recommend:
Feel free to come to a meetup or hop in the chatroom for help with licenses. It's complicated legal stuff. More information for the curious:
Get good so you can help the group (and also make all the cheddar).
Just do it! Grab some source code and start hacking. Simple guidelines for LibreMiami projects:
Non-LibreMiami projects can vary wildly on how they like work done. Some projects have entire tomes dedicated to coding guidelines. Others have no docs at all. Some projects are welcoming and others are run by total jerks. We can help you navigate all this at a meetup if there's a specific project you'd like to work on. We can also help you pick something good out.
Just do it! You don't have to be the best to get something amazing going. Plus, you have the rest of us cheering you on.
Here is a step-by-step guide for starting a project that you might find helpful.
If you already have one, great! If not you can check out the ideas page for inspiration.
Why are you starting the project? Is it to solve a problem? To learn something? For fun? Document this.
Especially if you're trying to solve a problem, see what's already out there. This can even include non-software solutions. Why are these solutions inadequate? Is there anything they get right? Can you leverage existing libre code? What problems might you run into? Document this.
At this stage you might find that there is already a really great libre solution to the problem. Maybe you decide to contribute to this project instead.
If you're not just scratching your own itch it is an excellent idea to do some proper UX research.
Decide what tools you're gonna use. Document this and also your coding style. Non-stacked braces and 4 space indentation seems popular (except for functions in C). For something like Python or Go that has a baked-in/official coding style, you should probably follow that.
We're excited to see what you come up with. Happy Hacking!
Tiks izdzēsta lapa "Newbie-Guide"
. Pārliecinieties, ka patiešām to vēlaties.