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Google Summer of Code 2016 @ the Python Software Foundation

Google Summer of Code is a global program that offers post-secondary students an opportunity to be paid for contributing to an open source project over a three month period. Since 2005, the Python Software Foundation has served as an "umbrella organization" to a variety of Python-related projects, as well as sponsoring projects related to the development of the Python language. It is our intention to apply as a mentoring organization again in 2016, but please remember that we won't know if we've been selected until the end of February.

The 2015 PSF GSoC coordinator is TerriOda. (terri on Freenode IRC, terrioda at gmail.com, but please email gsoc-admins(at)python(dot)org if you wish to contact an admin.)

The other org admins include James Lopeman (meflin on IRC) and Florian Fuchs (florianf on IRC) and Kushal Das (kushal on IRC)

It's still early!

With GSoC 2016 mentoring org applications not open 'till February 8, 2016, please remember that many mentors are not ready for GSoC mentoring yet and may be busy with other work. Please be respectful and patient! While it's never too early to get involved in open source, if you want to make the best impression on your communities, remember that we don't know anything about mentors, projects, sub-orgs, or even if Python will be accepted to participate at this point. Instead try questions like "How can I help?" or "I've tried to fix this bug, do you have some time to review my code?"

Dates and deadlines

Please note the GSoC dates and deadlines.

A few dates of note:

Students

Here's 7 things you can do to get started in free and open source software:

  1. Choose an organization to work with. See "How do I choose a project or a sub-org?" if you need help choosing. And don't forget, you can try working with more than one organization!

    • Experience with *any* open source group will help you prepare for GSoC.
    • But if you want the list of orgs who participated under the PSF banner last year, check last year's page here: SummerOfCode/2015 (We don't know who'll be able to participate in 2016, but that's a good place to start.)

  2. Start communicating with the developers. Join the mailing list, IRC channel, or any other communication channels the developers use. Listen, get to know the people involved, and ask questions.

    • If you want to make the best first impression, DO NOT start emails with "Dear Sir." Python has many mentors who are female and/or prefer other forms of address. Try "Dear developers" if you're sending a general email, or use whatever name they use on their email if you're addressing a specific person. Culturally speaking, first names or chosen nicknames are fine for most open source projects.
    • DO ask your question in public. Being able to participate in the open is a signal to developers that you're ready to participate in open source/free software, so it can improve your chances of being accepted to GSoC. It also means others can benefit from seeing your questions and the answers you get.

    • DON'T Ask to ask. Just get right to the point and ask your question without asking if you're allowed to ask a question first. See What does "don't ask to ask?" mean? for more explanation.

  3. Set up your own development environment. This can be a lot of work the first time, so budget time for it, and don't forget that you're going to want to run the code you've written, so you'll need some sort of test environment. This is a good time to practice asking good questions and helping improve setup instructions!

  4. Find some bugs and try to fix them. Many projects have bugs tagged as "easy", "bite-size", or "beginner-friendly" that will be easier for new contributors.

    • Note that if you apply as a student with the PSF you will be asked to submit a code sample, generally code related to your project. A few fixed bugs with code accepted upstream will make your application look great!
    • Some projects have beginner-friendly "bite-sized" bugs listed in the OpenHatch search engine, found here: http://openhatch.org/search/ And the OpenHatch team is full of friendly helpful people who don't mind answering questions!

    • Having trouble figuring out which bugs are beginner-friendly? Try searching for terms like "easy" in the bug tracker. Or just choose a bug that sounds easy to you and try to get started on it! What's easy for you may not be easy for others, so take advantage of your own skills and experience where you can. Remember to ask for help if you get stuck for too long, "I'm a new contributor and was trying to work on bug#123456. I have a question about how to..." -- if people can't help, sometimes they will be able to suggest another bug which would be more beginner-suitable.
    • Other "easy" bug ideas: look for typos and fix them. Set up new tests -- even if your project decides they don't need the first one you write, the practice of writing test cases will be useful for other development (e.g. when you want to add a new feature and need to include tests for it). Try using a tool like pylint to find style issues and correct those. (But pay attention to your project's style guide! Not everyone cares about the same things.)
  5. Find bugs and report them. It's always a good idea to get familiar with your project's bug reporting process. Writing excellent bug reports is a really useful skill, so try googling "writing good bug reports" and learn to write really great ones. You might even be able to help improve other people's bug reports by duplicating their results and asking questions to fill in information they didn't provide.

  6. Help with documentation. As a beginner in your project, you're going to see things that are confusing that more experienced developers may not notice. Take advantage of your beginner mindset and make sure to document anything you think is missing!

  7. Help others. This is a great idea for many reasons: explaining things can help you learn them better, demonstrating your skills as a good community member can make you more memorable when your mentors have to choose candidates, and being helpful makes your community a better place!

Mentors

Interested in volunteering with the Python Software Foundation? We've got roles to suit all sorts of people!

The biggest job is mentoring students: Mentoring a student as a primary mentor can be a pretty big time commitment (we recommend around 0-10 hours a week for the 3 months of the program) but it's a very rewarding chance to basically give a student an open source apprenticeship. We mentor in teams, so if all you can handle is a few code reviews or taking over for a week while someone's on vacation, we'd still love your help.

If you're not already part of an open source project, we can match you with one that's looking for more help so they can get your ramped up. Often students need someone who will help keep them on track, meet with them regularly, and answer more general questions about the tech industry and open source. So even if you're not a core contributor to a project, you can still be a really valuable volunteer.

Here's some resources to help you figure out how to be awesome and what to expect:

Want to help but not sure you can handle mentoring? We're also looking for friendly community members to help with other tasks! We'd love to have more people available on IRC/Mailing lists/Google+ to answer student and mentor questions in various time zones. TerriOda is also particularly looking for volunteers who can read and comment on student blogs, remind students if they haven't posted, and promote the work our students do to the larger Python community. Or maybe you have another skillset you'd like to contribute? If you want to help, we'd be happy to find a way to make that happen!

If you'd like to volunteer, get in touch with a sub-org admin or email the Python org admins at gsoc-admins(at)python(dot)org

PS - For experienced mentors, we have a Python GSoC list of ideas and we'd love both suggestions and help: https://github.com/terriko/gsoc/issues

Sub-orgs

To participate under the Python umbrella, a sub-org must do the following:

  1. Be a Python-based open source project that meets Google's requirements for GSoC.

  2. Have one sub-org admin and at least two mentors who are willing to commit to the full GSoC period. (More is awesome, though!)
  3. Accept the Python Community Code of Conduct for the duration of the program.

  4. Send an email indicating interest to gsoc-admins(at)python(dot)org before the Python deadline (March 7th, exceptions can be made in the case of exceptional students)
  5. Have a good ideas page. Here's a template. Getting a really great page sometimes takes a few rounds of revisions; Meflin will work with you to make sure your page is ready!

We can't promise to take everyone who meets those criteria, but we do try to take any group that we feel will give the students a great experience. TerriOda has final say in which projects participate under the Python umbrella, but please send any queries to all the admins at gsoc-admins(at)python(dot)org to make sure we're all on the same page.

Python projects are welcome and encouraged to apply as separate mentoring organizations directly with Google. We're happy to help you fill out your application and improve your ideas pages, as well as link your page to help students find you. If we've worked with you before, we may also be able to be a reference for you. It is totally fine if you want to use the Python umbrella org as a backup plan in case you don't get selected and we do! (But of course, remember that there's no guarantee that we'll get accepted either.) Stop by IRC and talk to meflin or email gsoc-admins(at)python(dot)org if you'd like some help.

Getting in Touch

Sign up to the gsoc-general(at)python.org mailing list to get updates, reminders, and to discuss questions.

We're also trying out a Python Google Summer of Code community on Google+ this year, if you want to use a social media platform.

Stop by #python-gsoc on irc.freenode.net to chat and ask questions.

Please note that Python has a Community Code of Conduct and mentors and students working with the PSF are asked to abide by it as members of the Python community.

Do plan to stay for a while if you want answers on IRC: Our mentors generally have day-jobs and are not always paying attention to IRC (especially right now during GSoC off-season: expect more active mentors after Feb 29th). Please ask questions directly on channel (you don't need to introduce yourself or say hi first) and please be patient while waiting for an answer. You could wind up waiting an hour or much longer for answers if all the mentors are in meetings at work or otherwise occupied. If you can't stay that long, stay as long as you can and then send email to the mailing list instead so mentors have some way to reach you.

There are some great resources at http://irchelp.org/ if you need help finding a client or learning how to use IRC.

For mentors: All the gsoc admins can be reached at gsoc-admins(at)python(dot)org if you have questions about participating. (Students should email gsoc-general(at)python.org with all of their questions, unless they are of a sensitive personal nature.)

Python Sub-orgs and Project Ideas

Ideas for projects and links to Python-related teams' idea pages will appear here once mentors have gotten in touch the PSF org admins.If you are unsure if your favourite Python project will be participating, ask them and encourage them to sign up! (You can also check last year's page to find projects that might participate again.)

New sub-orgs can apply up to March 7th, so this list may not be fully complete until March 8th.

http://python.org/images/python-logo.gif

Core Python

CPython, its standard library, and its infrastructure.

Website | core-mentorship@python.org | #python-dev on Freenode | Ideas Page (Updated!)

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Dipy

Dipy is a free and open source software project focusing mainly on diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) analysis.

Website | Mailing list |Ideas Page

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