last day (21 days later) » 

14:30
Hello
Hey
I am looking to have some more Python code written for pyparsing's unit tests.
So , I am new to open source , and i was thinking I could contribute on something
I am up for any sort of work , Boring or not Boring
I think this would be a little more interesting than docs, you would be writing code
Great!
I went through a recent coverage report, and then walked through all the code gaps noting what behavior should trigger that bit of code. I think I came up with about 40 tests, maybe more.
But I haven't posted the list yet, so there is not much to go on.
14:39
I see..
Just let me know , where to start from!
If you clone the repo though, you can look at the unit test structure. Also, there is a bit of learning curve with pyparsing itself, that you would need to come up so you could write tests.
I'll try to post the list of tests to the repo wiki this evening, but in the meantime, clone the repo, or just pip install pyparsing for now, and write some little parsers.
Do you guys like give out SRS documents or something? like requirements , also , If something sounds very basic please pardon me..
I can give you some coaching in this room.
@PaulMcG WOW! amazing
I think parser-writing with pyparsing is kind of fun - it implements its own internal DSL in Python using operator overloading.
Nicer than lex/yacc, albeit a bit less rigorous
14:43
I checked out the Repo, again, I am sorry if it sounds stupid but I do not like clearly get the project
oh
The pyparsing module docstring has some "Getting Started" suggestions
Do you use regular expressions much?
alright, will go through that
Pyparsing is like a super-verbose regex.
The repo wiki Documentation page has some blog post links too, and there is a nice recent one that I don't think I've added yet, 1 sec.
Umm, I use it but like not that often , I used to work on django and the URLs.py had a bit of REGEX so that is pretty much my exp with REGEX
@PaulMcG Oh... being less verbose is I think Regex's only con..
14:47
My God You wrote this Lib? like Wow..
I need to break off for a bit, but I'll check this room every so often
Sure thing.. I wil get up to speed
or at lest try as much as possible
And if you decide this isn't really what you want to work on, just let me know - my feelings won't be hurt (much)
Thanks a ton
@PaulMcG Only feeling I have is "God , I hope he doesnt kick me out after realizing I am dumb :-P"
I've gotten many posts from people where their pyparsing project is their first Python project. So it should be pretty newb-friendly
14:50
Ahhh. that is a relief..
And unit tests should be pretty tiny, so easy to focus on one little bit. Ok, I'll check back later.
Sure.. Seeya
 
6 hours later…
21:11
Hey, I just added a new page to the repo wiki: github.com/pyparsing/pyparsing/wiki/Contributing that includes a list of needed unit tests. It's a longer list than I thought! The repo is being restructured right now, but the tests are pretty much as they are going to be - look over the contents of the test_unit.py file, and see if you can compose some tests that address the items on the list on the wiki page.

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