My advice would be to just go for it. If you find a bug and fix it or add a useful feature, it’s absolutely worth submitting. And collaborating with other devs will help you grow your skills a lot faster.
Less skill improvement and more trivial pursuits. Lol
I’ve been a Lemmy user for a little while now and my perceived short comings of it are starting to irk me like other IT systems started irking me and fixing them will make me life easier.
I know from experience that once I attain a level of mastery that’s sufficient to fix what I want to fix; then that level will stop increasing. :p
And now that you’ve given me license, I’m going to tell them to redirect the blame to you. Lol
I find a lot of people in tech end up with imposter syndrome like this, but the reality is that most code in the wild is really terrible.
It genuinely made me wonder if my rust is already good enough to let me start lending a hand on Lemmy.
I’ve been practicing but my python/ruby/java/c++ keep interrupting my hello world comprehension self tests.
My advice would be to just go for it. If you find a bug and fix it or add a useful feature, it’s absolutely worth submitting. And collaborating with other devs will help you grow your skills a lot faster.
Less skill improvement and more trivial pursuits. Lol
I’ve been a Lemmy user for a little while now and my perceived short comings of it are starting to irk me like other IT systems started irking me and fixing them will make me life easier.
I know from experience that once I attain a level of mastery that’s sufficient to fix what I want to fix; then that level will stop increasing. :p
And now that you’ve given me license, I’m going to tell them to redirect the blame to you. Lol
:)