On Wed, 05 Jan 2011 17:18:00 +0530, yeswanth <swamiyeswanth@hotmail.com> wrote:
My name is Yeswanth . I am doing my third year Btech in Computer Science [...] Can anyone suggest me some areas where I can actually start with developing for this proje
Welcome, Yeswanth. Great idea to get involved early :) I'm guessing the PSF will apply to GSoC in 2011, but I'm not involved in that decision so I don't really know anything. The best way to start out helping is to do what you've done, read the developer docs (which Brett Cannon is currently updating, by the way). Next you could take a look at the bug tracker at bugs.python.org. There are plenty of open issues there that need to be reviewed (anyone can do reviews). Try out patches for issues that have existing patches, note anything missing (tests, doc updates, etc) (supply them if you like), and report your experiences with testing the patch, and any comments you may have on it. When you feel ready to try your hand at writing patches, click on the 'easy issues' button on the left. That tag is assigned to bugs where the reviewer thought the patch could be written in a day or less of work (of course, if you are still relatively new to Python coding it may take longer to do the necessary research to be able to write the patch). If you like you can also come hang out on the #python-dev IRC channel on freenode, where a number of the core developers and other folks hang out and discuss issues (among other things :) -- R. David Murray www.bitdance.com