Difference between revisions of "Real World Mozilla"

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(Topic List)
(Topic List)
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==Topic List==
 
==Topic List==
  
Monday
+
'''Monday'''
 
* What is Open Source?
 
* What is Open Source?
 
* What is the Mozilla Project?
 
* What is the Mozilla Project?
 
* The Mozilla developer community
 
* The Mozilla developer community
 +
* Mozilla Platform and Technology overview
 
* Using IRC to communicate with other Mozilla developers around the world
 
* Using IRC to communicate with other Mozilla developers around the world
  
Tuesday
+
'''Tuesday'''
* Mozilla Platform and Technology overview
+
* More on IRC
* How to build Mozilla from source code
+
* The Mozilla Build Process and Build System
 
* Using Revision Control Systems (CVS and SVN)
 
* Using Revision Control Systems (CVS and SVN)
 +
* Introduction to make and writing Makefiles
 +
* Building Mozilla from source code
  
Wednesday
+
'''Wednesday'''
 +
* Using developer tools (e.g., diff, patch, etc.)
 
* Using Mozilla webtools (OpenGROK/LXR, Bonsai, Bugzilla, Pastebin)
 
* Using Mozilla webtools (OpenGROK/LXR, Bonsai, Bugzilla, Pastebin)
 
* Finding your way around in the Mozilla source tree
 
* Finding your way around in the Mozilla source tree
 
* Learning how to develop and debug Mozilla (C/C++ and JavaScript)
 
* Learning how to develop and debug Mozilla (C/C++ and JavaScript)
 +
* Introduction to XPCOM Components
 +
* Writing your first XPCOM Component
  
Thursday
+
'''Thursday'''
* Using important developer tools (make, diff, patch, cl, etc.)
+
* Finishing your first XPCOM Component
 
* Using Mozilla’s collaborative documentation tools (wikis, wiki markup)
 
* Using Mozilla’s collaborative documentation tools (wikis, wiki markup)
 
* Bugs, Bugzilla, Testing, and QA
 
* Bugs, Bugzilla, Testing, and QA
 +
* Bug Triage, methods of manual testing
  
Friday
+
'''Friday'''
* Hands-on Firefox Extension Development (XPCOM and XUL)
+
* XUL and Javascript Firefox Extensions
 +
* Writing your first XUL/JS Extension
 
* XULRunner application deployment
 
* XULRunner application deployment
  

Revision as of 17:58, 24 February 2007

Dive Into Mozilla Development: a one week crash course

Overview

Mozilla, creator of the popular Firefox web browser, is one of the largest collaborative open source projects in the world. Working on Mozilla is challenging, fun, and one of the best ways to gain real-world development experience. Getting involved with Mozilla means learning new skills, meeting new people, and having the opportunity to work on global software products with tens of millions of users. However, as exciting as it is, getting started can be intimidating and overwhelming—Mozilla has millions of lines of source code. This course will give you the knowledge you need to start building Firefox extensions by introducing you to the following topics:

Topic List

Monday

  • What is Open Source?
  • What is the Mozilla Project?
  • The Mozilla developer community
  • Mozilla Platform and Technology overview
  • Using IRC to communicate with other Mozilla developers around the world

Tuesday

  • More on IRC
  • The Mozilla Build Process and Build System
  • Using Revision Control Systems (CVS and SVN)
  • Introduction to make and writing Makefiles
  • Building Mozilla from source code

Wednesday

  • Using developer tools (e.g., diff, patch, etc.)
  • Using Mozilla webtools (OpenGROK/LXR, Bonsai, Bugzilla, Pastebin)
  • Finding your way around in the Mozilla source tree
  • Learning how to develop and debug Mozilla (C/C++ and JavaScript)
  • Introduction to XPCOM Components
  • Writing your first XPCOM Component

Thursday

  • Finishing your first XPCOM Component
  • Using Mozilla’s collaborative documentation tools (wikis, wiki markup)
  • Bugs, Bugzilla, Testing, and QA
  • Bug Triage, methods of manual testing

Friday

  • XUL and Javascript Firefox Extensions
  • Writing your first XUL/JS Extension
  • XULRunner application deployment

Cost

Free for School of Computer Studies students and Seneca faculty/staff

Prerequisites

It is assumed that those taking the course already have some knowledge of programming (e.g., C/C++, JavaScript), but enthusiasm is more important than experience. There will be no tests and no exam, only hands-on opportunities to learn. Upon completion of the course you will have an excellent sense of the Mozilla project and its community, practices, tools, and opportunities.

When

Classes will run from Monday February 26 to Friday March 2, 2007, 10:00 am – 4:00 pm (one hour break for lunch).

Location

Seneca@York campus room S1206

Registration

Registration is now closed!

Computer Studies students please register by sending an email from your learn account to Daman Panesar. Please include your student number. Faculty and staff please email David Humphrey