GSoC Community Bonding: KMyMoney

Suraj Kumar Mahto suraj.mahto49 at gmail.com
Thu May 20 21:31:37 BST 2021


Thank you for the inputs.

> I think using a work branch is easier. In particular, for other people,
e.g.
> the mentors, who want to test your work. Since you do have commit access,
I
> suggest to go for a work branch.

I was thinking about the same.

> I am thinking about an initial virtual meet with you, Ralf and myself if
that
> is OK for you. I have to check when Ralf has time for it as he is usually
> pretty busy. Maybe, sometime over the weekend. What is a good time for
you?
> Remember, both of us are 4.5 hrs "behind".

With regards to the online meet, I have my viva voce examinations scheduled
from 21st to 24th May which was postponed due to the current covid scenario
in India and was announced after the GSoC results. This will cover this
weekend period. I was asking if it can be done for the next weekend? If
that is not possible I can manage the meet in the evening (after 7:30 PM
IST) for this weekend. For the time, I think anything between 11:30 AM IST
(8:00 AM CEST) to 11 PM IST (7:30 PM CEST)  is fine for me.

Regards
Suraj Kumar Mahto
https://invent.kde.org/surajsloth

On Thu, May 20, 2021 at 8:33 PM Ingo Klöcker <kloecker at kde.org> wrote:

> On Donnerstag, 20. Mai 2021 16:37:51 CEST Thomas Baumgart wrote:
> > On Donnerstag, 20. Mai 2021 15:08:59 CEST Suraj Kumar Mahto wrote:
> > > Hello Thomas Sir, Ralf Sir and the rest of the community members,
> > > Thank you for the warm welcome. As the Community Bonding period for
> GSoC
> > > 2021 has already begun and I wish not to miss out on anything. Here are
> > > the
> > > following insights I have started working on regarding the same :
> > > - I have set up my development environment, updated my system with all
> the
> > > required devel packages. For reference, I use OpenSUSE Tumbleweed with
> the
> > > latest KDE Plasma.
> >
> > Great, I use OpenSUSE Leap 15.3 here with the KDE provided by the distro.
>
> I'm using Tumbleweed. I think it's a good choice because it quickly gets
> the
> new KDE Frameworks releases. This allows me to concentrate on the
> libraries
> and applications I'm working on while also having the latest and greatest
> Frameworks libraries without having to built them myself.
>
> > > Some questions :
> > > - I am planning to push my work in a work branch or should I work on a
> > > forked repo?
> >
> > I don't have an immediate answer. Will let you know. Do you have a
> > preference?
>
> I think using a work branch is easier. In particular, for other people,
> e.g.
> the mentors, who want to test your work. Since you do have commit access,
> I
> suggest to go for a work branch.
>
> > > - Is using Qt Creator suggested instead of some different IDE?
> >
> > That is fine. I am using KDevelop here, but that is not a must. Use
> whatever
> > you are comfortable with.
>
> I'm also using KDevelop. I'm not super happy with it, e.g. in my opinion
> the
> Git integration is not very good, but it's working okay for me and I'm too
> lazy to try something else. I'm using git gui for committing and gitk for
> checking the logs instead (configured as external tools in KDevelop). I
> haven't tried Qt Creator in a long time, so I cannot say how it compares.
> In
> the end you need to find out which IDE works best for you.
>
> Regards,
> Ingo
>
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