Google Code-in/2013

Google Code-In is a contest to introduce pre-university students (ages 13-17) to the many kinds of contributions that make open source software development possible. Students must complete tasks, one at a time.

Check Wikimedia's list of tasks in Google Code-in.

The Google Code-in 2013 contest runs from November 18, 2013 to January 6, 2014.
 * 2013-11-18: Wikitech-l: Google Code-in starting NOW (important!)
 * 2013-11-01: Wikitech-l: Google Code-in: YES, WE ARE IN! (our community annoucement)
 * 2013-11-01: Mentoring Organizations for Google Code-in 2013 are announced (Google's announcement)

Instructions for GCI students
These instructions are common to all the GCI tasks. Each category of tasks has further instructions.

Feedback and support
Each GCI task specifies a public community channel for related questions and comments that might be more efficient than Google Melange. Identifying yourself as a GCI student may help you getting more/faster help from other contributors in addition to your mentor(s). For feedback not tied to a specific task you can use more generic channels like IRC or mailing lists. Avoid private email or support requests in our social media channels. Please be patient when asking questions. Learn more at Communication.
 * Sometimes the channel is a bug report. See Bugzilla (except for Kiwix tasks which use Sourceforge instead).
 * Sometimes the channel is a wiki discussion page. See Help:Talk pages.

The code of MediaWiki, its extensions, and Wikimedia's server configuration is located in Git repositories. You are expected to provide your work (patches etc.) in both Google Melange and Wikimedia Gerrit for review. See Developer access and Gerrit/Tutorial for more information. In case you have problems with Gerrit, providing your work in the corresponding bug report in Wikimedia Bugzilla is an acceptable workaround.

Suggested reading
If you choose a code-related task, you might want to at least skim these pages first to avoid unnecessary setbacks during the review process:
 * Developer access and Gerrit tutorial for information about how to download our code, test it and start submitting patches
 * Coding conventions and any subpages relevant to your task (PHP, JavaScript, Python, …)
 * Commit message guidelines, especially the Example section at the bottom

Communicate soon and often
If your task has a related bug report, comment on the report that you have started the work and request to have it assigned to you.

If your task requires the creation of wiki pages, create them to draft your text from scratch, and communicate in the Google Melange task the URL of the new page.

By communicating early you will get more attention, feedback and help, not only from your mentor(s) but perhaps from other community members as well.

Once you have started, feel free sharing your progress (or lack of it) as you accomplish little milestones or you get stuck in a problem. As long as you communicate through bug reports or discussion wiki pages you don't have to worry about spamming people: those who follow these bug reports and wiki pages are interested in your work.

Mentors' corner
First things first:
 * 1) Become an official mentor in Google's Melange.
 * 2) List above the tasks you want to create at the GCI site.
 * 3) Before starting creating tasks, please contribute to the common boilerplate text.
 * 4) Watch this page for more instructions, or ask for them.
 * 5) Be ready to learn with the rest of us along the way.  :)

Become a Wikimedia GCI mentor
Register as mentor. Afterwards, inform Quim and Andre of your username in Google Melange so you can be invited to become a mentor for Wikimedia. (Tasks can not be imported before you have been marked as a mentor for Wikimedia.)

Requirements of a task
All the tasks listed on this wikipage must be also listed in Google Melange well before November 17, since that is the interface that students will use. A basic boilerplate task description pointing to bug reports should be added below.

Please add new tasks directly in Google Melange instead of this wikipage. Mentors can add tasks at any time, also after GCI has started. Usually this is what happens when students are finishing tasks, they have already learned about a specific area, and they want more tasks related to it.
 * Tasks are supposed to take 2-3 hours to an experienced contributor. It is fine if the first task takes even 2-3 days to a student because they must understand many concepts and setup their environment first. And it is also ok if students specialize in a type of task, so every new task takes less time to complete until they are also able to complete them in a couple of hours.
 * Tasks are self-contained. Students must be able to complete it without much knowledge of the context, or the background.
 * By default, tasks are described in a bug report with the keyword "easy" and 1-2 mentors CCed and volunteering explicitly in the comments.

Bugs which have been made into GCI tasks should have "gci2013" added to their Whiteboard field to make it easy to track them. You can add the URL to the task definition in a comment or URL field.
 * A list of bugs which have a corresponding GCI task already: ALL whiteboard:gci2013
 * A list of potential bugs fitting for GCI: MediaWiki and extensions, +keyword:easy, -whiteboard:gci2013, no patches pending ("GCI candidate bugs" saved search).

Org admins Quim Gil and Andre Klapper go through proposed tasks and confirm them. CC us in the bug reports.
 * Bug description. Detailed explanation with full URL link to corresponding bug report and links to any information that could be helpful. Hours that it takes to complete the task (be generous!). Arbitrary tags that can be searched for (e.g. programming language). Name of the mentor(s): ~

Common instructions for tasks
We want to use common texts in tasks wherever it makes sense to simplify the process of creating good task descriptions. Let's draft different levels of common texts: generic for all, specific to a category, specific to a type of task. When creating a task, use the levels that make sense. Let's link to on-wiki instructions and background as much as possible. This gives us freedom to improve content without having to edit multiple tasks.

For all tasks
The last sentence of each task description in Google Melange must be: Students are required to read Wikimedia's general instructions first.

Kiwix for Android
Kiwix is a Wikipedia offline reader. These are tasks related to the new release of its Android app. Instructions to compile the app can be found here (Android section). This requires knowledge of the Java programming language.

User Interface: SVG Graphics
This task requires existing graphics skills working with a Vector graphics application (e.g. Inkscape). Links to SVG file(s) that you have created are welcome. Basic knowledge of CSS might also be helpful for integration.

Pywikibot
PyWikibot is a Python-based framework to write bots for MediaWiki. Patches can be submited through the gerrit uploader (you need a MediaWiki.org account). More documentation on gerrit can be found here. After you have successfully claimed this task in Google Melange please do use the bug report in Bugzilla for communication instead of Google Melange. This allows more PWB developers to be reached! General development questions can be asked on the Pywikibot mailing list and the #pywikipediabot IRC channel.

Visual Editor
VisualEditor is MediaWiki's WYSIWYG editor. You can find out more about it here.