Difference between revisions of "DPS909 & OSD600 Winter 2018"
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* [[DPS909/OSD600 Winter 2018 Lab 1|Lab 1]] | * [[DPS909/OSD600 Winter 2018 Lab 1|Lab 1]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Week 3 == | ||
+ | |||
+ | * TODO: | ||
+ | ** Finish [[DPS909/OSD600 Winter 2018 Lab 1|Lab 1]] | ||
+ | ** Complete [[OSD & DPS909 Winter 2018 Release 0.1|Release 0.1 Part A]] | ||
+ | ** Start Learning Git, GitHub | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Source Code Reading: by reading code we didn't write, we often learn things we didn't know were possible. | ||
+ | ** Consider libphonenumber's <code>Leniency</code> type and Constant-Specific Methods in Java. ENUMs can define an abstract method and override them with a concrete method in each constant | ||
+ | *** [https://github.com/googlei18n/libphonenumber/blob/0068d861a68d3d4612f7bf8646ab844dd3cefce5/cpp/src/phonenumbers/phonenumbermatcher.h#L54-L74 C++ impl] | ||
+ | *** [https://github.com/googlei18n/libphonenumber/blob/3db7670b42c4c03c3d69d9ed43cfe15fde978c5e/java/libphonenumber/src/com/google/i18n/phonenumbers/PhoneNumberUtil.java#L473-L570 Java impl] | ||
+ | ** Consider <code>\p{...}</code> Unicode categories in Regex | ||
+ | *** https://mothereff.in/regexpu | ||
+ | *** https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_character_property | ||
+ | *** <code>/\p{Sc}/u;</code> | ||
+ | |||
+ | * '''Introducing [http://git-scm.com/ git]''' | ||
+ | ** [[DPS909 & OSD600 Fall 2017 - Git Walkthrough | Git Walkthrough - Basics]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | * '''Readings/Resources''' | ||
+ | ** Courses on [http://www.senecacollege.ca/lynda/ Lynda] | ||
+ | *** [https://www.lynda.com/Git-tutorials/Git-Essential-Training/100222-2.html?srchtrk=index%3a0%0alinktypeid%3a2%0aq%3agit%0apage%3a1%0as%3arelevance%0asa%3atrue%0aproducttypeid%3a2 Git Essential Training] | ||
+ | *** [https://www.lynda.com/Git-tutorials/Up-Running-Git-GitHub/409275-2.html?srchtrk=index%3a0%0alinktypeid%3a2%0aq%3agit%0apage%3a1%0as%3arelevance%0asa%3atrue%0aproducttypeid%3a2 Up and Running with Git and GitHub] | ||
+ | ** Books | ||
+ | *** [http://git-scm.com/book Pro Git] | ||
+ | *** [http://www.ericsink.com/vcbe/index.html Version Control by Example, online book] | ||
+ | ** References | ||
+ | *** [http://gitref.org/ Git Reference] | ||
+ | *** [http://marklodato.github.com/visual-git-guide/index-en.html Visual Git Reference] | ||
+ | *** [http://sixrevisions.com/resources/git-tutorials-beginners/ Overview of Git Tutorials (many good ones)] | ||
+ | *** [http://help.github.com/ Github documentation] | ||
+ | *** [https://desktop.github.com/ GitHub Desktop] |
Revision as of 11:36, 29 January 2018
Week 1
- Some questions:
- When you hear "open source," what comes to mind?
- On a scale from 1 (not at all) to 5 (very)...
- How comfortable are you working with technology you've never seen before?
- How curious are you about how things work?
- How likely are you to stick with a problem when it gets hard to solve?
- How likely are you to ask for help when you get stuck?
- How likely are you to pause your own work in order to help someone else who is stuck?
- How self-motivated are you?
- How self-directed are you?
- How to have Success in this course:
- Willingness to be lost and not panic
- Willingness to put yourself out there, jump in
- Curiosity
- Being driven, persistence
- Willingness to ask for help
- Willingness to give others help
- Independent learning
- Doing more than the bare minimum
- Discussion
- Let's talk about Copyright and Open Source Licenses
- IANAL: "I Am Not A Lawyer"
- We're going to explore licensing from the POV of a developer participating in open projects
- Copyright (Copyright in Canada video)
- Who created it, "owns" it.
- Set of exclusive rights granted to the work's creator
- "The right to copy," to produce or reproduce a work or substantial portion thereof
- Copyright is automatic when a work is created, you don't have to register it.
- Copyright in Canada
- Copyright Guide
- In a software project, there can be many copyright holders (e.g., many contributors), or all contributors may assign their copyright to the project (e.g., CLA, which we'll cover later)
Week 2
- Licenses
- Rights, privileges, responsibilities, etc. applicable to someone other than the work's creator
- "Terms and Conditions"
- These must be granted by a copyright holder
- No License
- What can you do with code you find that has no license?
- what can I, can't I do?
- Public Domain
- SQLite, which is now used by literally everybody, see http://www.sqlite.org/famous.html
- Unlicense
- Consider some proprietary/closed End User License Agreements (EULA)
- Open Source Licenses
- The Open Source Definition
- Approved licenses by the Open Source Initiative: https://opensource.org/licenses
- Choose a License: https://choosealicense.com/
- Learning Licenses: BSD
- Family of Licenses, including 2-Clause BSD, 3-Clause BSD (aka New BDS), 4-Clause BSD
- "Why you should use a BSD style license for your Open Source Project"
- BSD Licenses code is usually compatible with other open/closed code, when you want to mix them.
- Example software projects licensed under the BSD License:
- Summary:
- You need to retain the license and copyright notice
- You can use it commercially or non-commercially (privately)
- You can distribute it freely
- You can modify it freely
Week 3
- TODO:
- Finish Lab 1
- Complete Release 0.1 Part A
- Start Learning Git, GitHub
- Source Code Reading: by reading code we didn't write, we often learn things we didn't know were possible.
- Consider libphonenumber's
Leniency
type and Constant-Specific Methods in Java. ENUMs can define an abstract method and override them with a concrete method in each constant - Consider
\p{...}
Unicode categories in Regex
- Consider libphonenumber's
- Introducing git
- Readings/Resources