Hello guys, as a student and amateur developer, I know that I'm not a very good programmer yet, but a lot of people seem to recommend contributing to e.g. github projects to get better at it. How can I know if have the knowledge or expertise to contribute? What if my commits aren't good enough? They probably would reject them directly, but I want to see what the experienced people here think about this.
Incredibly inspiring story, and it shows you don't have to build something huge or amazing to help !
Closer to home, a coworker wrote some simple Javascript helpers for the same reason, he didn't find anything that helped him online, and it's amazing to see them everywhere.
The Javascript environment in particular is ever-changing and can use some help :) , and there's new stuff every day where you can contribute.
OTOH, I wouldn't go to contribute directly to the Linux kernel or any big, mature project where serious experience is needed (and even then, they do need help although they might direct you to help with the docs or stuff like that).
Thanks for the link.
I believe that the projects I will contribute to wouod be C or C++ because it is what I like the most and the hardest, although Python or JavaScript could be fine too.
I will probably try to make some minor changes to little projects with a low number of contributors.
Some projects are setup for new contributors, they will have tickets marked as easy, so you can start with those. They will also have code reviews, so rejection would still be educational and you could probably come back with revised version that would be accepted.
I've seen amazing stuff built by students - the React Create App was created by a student !
https://mxstbr.blog/2016/12/a-dream-come-true/
Incredibly inspiring story, and it shows you don't have to build something huge or amazing to help !
Closer to home, a coworker wrote some simple Javascript helpers for the same reason, he didn't find anything that helped him online, and it's amazing to see them everywhere.
The Javascript environment in particular is ever-changing and can use some help :) , and there's new stuff every day where you can contribute.
OTOH, I wouldn't go to contribute directly to the Linux kernel or any big, mature project where serious experience is needed (and even then, they do need help although they might direct you to help with the docs or stuff like that).