Education/ComputerScience: Difference between revisions

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* Mentors
* Mentors


==[[Education/ComputerScience/WorkingWithSource|Working with the source code]]==
==[[Education/ComputerScience/EssentialSkills|Essential Development Skills]]==
Learn how to get Mozilla source code, edit it and compile it.
You can't do anything with Mozilla if you can't download and compile the source code. For many, Mozilla may be the largest project they have ever built. Start here for the essential skill set:
 
* getting the source code
==[[Education/ComputerScience/Testing|Testing]]==
* compiling the source code
If you want to submit a patch and see it accepted you will probably need to write a test to go with it. Learn about all the different kinds of tests there are for Mozilla code.
* navigating the source code
 
* testing
==[[Education/ComputerScience/Debugging|Debugging]]==
* debugging
Learn how to use tools available for any operating system to debug Mozilla.
* creating patches


==[[Education/ComputerScience/LanguageReference|Language reference]]==
==[[Education/ComputerScience/LanguageReference|Language reference]]==

Revision as of 20:46, 2 July 2009

Overview

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Mozilla Platform

Firefox, Thunderbird and many more applications are built on a common Mozilla platform. This is where you can find the rendering engine, document parsers, JavaScript interpreter and cross platform methods of interacting with the local operating system.

Mozilla Applications

Firefox is only one of many applications built on the Mozilla platform. The list of Mozilla based applications is quite long. If you want to build you own application on the platform, consider using XULRunner.

Extending

Mozilla based software is extensible through four types of add-ons: extensions, plug-ins, themes and now Jetpack. Learn how you can change the behavior of a Mozilla application without changing the code.

Embedding

Parts of Mozilla code can be separated from the platform and used inside your own applications. For instance, the Gecko rendering engine. For embedding basics and instructions visit the Embedding page at MDC.

Release engineering

A big part of getting a product like Firefox to market is the infrastructure for building and testing the code. Unfortunately, there isn't much documentation at MDC describing the process, but changing that is a goal of Mozilla Education.

Tools used by Mozilla

Learn how to use the tools that Mozilla developers use. Using only a browser, it is possible to:

  • browse and search source code for all Mozilla projects
  • see older versions the Mozilla source code
  • track bugs reports and submit patches
  • see the status of the latest patches to the Mozilla source code
  • share snippets of code

Research

Mozilla Education expects that many visitors to this site will be academics and students looking for research opportunities. Mozilla has a wealth of data that it is willing to share. What is needed is to connect research that academics want to do with research Mozilla may find useful. Mozilla wishes to support research that is open, collaborative and advances the goal of building an open web. Please join #Education or the weekly status call if you wish to discuss research opportunities.

Survival skills

How to get help from the community

Learn how to get help directory from other Mozilla contributors using

  • Wikis
  • Mailing lists
  • Blogs and Planets
  • IRC
  • Mentors

Essential Development Skills

You can't do anything with Mozilla if you can't download and compile the source code. For many, Mozilla may be the largest project they have ever built. Start here for the essential skill set:

  • getting the source code
  • compiling the source code
  • navigating the source code
  • testing
  • debugging
  • creating patches

Language reference

Tutorials and reference for C++ and JavaScript, the languages of the Mozilla platform.