Hi Bakul,
Thanks for very good explanation.
I agree with your idea of creating my own application using Go. Also that
is totally correct that already created projects mostly have architecture
in place and I need to work according to their practices.
Regarding coding skills , I am carrying 3 year
Here’s a somewhat different POV. Hope it helps.
If you decide to work on an existing project, often times as a newbie you’ll be
asked to fix bugs or add a small feature, which may not always the most
exciting thing to do + you may have to bootstrap on the code and learn a lot of
other stuff whi
Hi Jacob,
Thanks for reply. I'll surely check links you have provided.
I agree with your suggestion regarding famous hot repos trending on Github.
I'll check them too.
Thanks,
Regds,
*Malhar Vora*
http://about.me/malhar.vora
On Mon, Feb 13, 2017 at 12:23 PM, Jakob Borg wrote:
> You can pr
You can probably assume by default that any open source project out there with
open issues welcomes your help. :)
On GitHub, you can list the most starred repos. These are projects that have
been around for a long time and probably are fairly mature in welcoming new
contributors. Definitely bro
Hi,
I like e in San Diego, California and I am in the same boat as Malhar,
looking for a chance in the Golang world.
Jonathan, how do you find out about open source projects in Golang that
need help?
Thanks,
Néstor
On Feb 12, 2017 5:35 PM, "Jonathan Yu" wrote:
Have you considered contribut
Have you considered contributing to an open source project of interest to
you?
On Sun, Feb 12, 2017, 10:27 Malhar Vora wrote:
>
>
>
> Hi Everyone,
>
> I am looking for part-time, remote internship kind of opportunity to
> work for completely free to learn Golang. Can anyone help me wit
Hi Everyone,
I am looking for part-time, remote internship kind of opportunity to
work for completely free to learn Golang. Can anyone help me with that ?.
Just for your information I already have 3 years of experience in
Python and zero experience in Golang.
Please