Saly, I have no experience in programming, but I'll at least help with transations.
Programming
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I'm not a dev, but I do have SOME coding experience and have been wanting to help with some open source projects, if nothing else but for the experience. Rust has been on my "to learn" list for like a year now. I def have a lot to learn, but the best way to learn is to get your hands dirty. I'll take a look at the Github page and see if there's any low-hanging fruit I can try to tackle lol
EDIT: I'm pretty sure I can help with some of these. My coding skills are out of practice, and idk any Rust yet, but I'm a fast learner. Currently learning how to use git to fork a repo, add code, and create a PR, then I'll go learn some Rust syntax and get to work! I'm actually really excited! I've been wanting to figure out how to contribute to FOSS projects since I started daily driving Arch Linux like a year ago, and this is a great opporunity for me to learn!
If anyone has any development tips for a noob like me, let me know! I'm going in pretty blind here, so any advice is appreciated!
Just a general tip: don't use your distro version of rust (Lemmy) and nodejs (lemmy-UI). Instead, install them using a version manager, which allows you to switch to different versions of rust or nodejs without being tied to whatever version your distro have in their repository. This is very useful during development when you often need to try different versions to debug an issue (e.g. is this bug only happen on certain compiler version?), testing an upcoming beta features, etc. This apply to most programming languages as well, such as Python, PHP, Go, etc.
For rust, rustup
seems to be a popular choice. For nodejs, nvm
and asdf
is quite popular. asdf
even support both rust and nodejs.
Thank you for this. Finally a good reason to learn more rust 👍