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About Sprinting

TODO: Discuss the requirements of a successful sprint

Instructions for Sprint Participants

  • Find a sprint you want to work on.
  • Add your name to the participants section of the sprint(s) you are interested in. Use the same name that you emailed to texas@python.org.
  • NOTE: the unconference "organizers" will then give your email address to the sprint organizer, so that he may contact you with details.

Instructions for Sprint Organizers

  • Add a section below describing your sprint. This section should describe what you intend to accomplish. It must be brief. Any details should go in a separate wiki page or project page that you link.
  • Add a participants section.
  • Add your name to the participants section as the organizer.
  • Create a link from your name in the participants section to a bio page describing yourself.
  • If people express an interest in participating in your sprint, then you will need to add a link to some sort of project page. At a bare minimum, you need a page on this wiki providing more details about your sprint. Whether project page or wiki, you need to establish a list of issues (bugs to fix or features to add).

See the "Pyglet and Miru" sprint below for an example.

Sprints

Pyglet and Miru

Pyglet is a gaming and multimedia library (glorified wrappers around OpenGL). Miru is a 3rd party library that enables easier use of 3D from creation and use of primitives to application of effects (Reflection, particles, etc) and texture control. The idea of the sprint is to perform the following:

  • squash bugs
  • improve 3D support in Miru where seen lacking
  • document Miru

Particpants:

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Page last modified on August 24, 2009, at 08:26 PM