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# How to apply
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This page should help you get started with applying for an outreach program
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with Zulip.
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We try to make the application process as valuable for the applicant as
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possible. Expect high-quality code reviews, a supportive community, and
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publicly viewable patches you can link to from your resume, regardless of
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whether you are selected.
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## Application criteria
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We expect applicants to have experience with the technologies relevant
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to their project, or else have strong general programming
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experience. If you are just getting started learning how to program,
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we recommend taking time to learn the basics (there are many great
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online materials available for free!), and applying in the next
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program cycle.
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In addition to the requirements of the specific outreach program
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you're applying to, successful applicants are expected to demonstrate
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the following:
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1. **Ability to contribute to a large codebase.** Accepted applicants
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generally have five or more merged (or nearly merged) pull
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requests, including at least a couple involving significant
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complexity. The quality of your best work is more important than
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the quantity, so be sure to [follow our coding
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guidelines](../contributing/code-style.md) and [self-review your
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work](../contributing/code-reviewing.md#reviewing-your-own-code)
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before submitting it for review.
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2. **Clear communication.** Building open-source software is a collaborative
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venture, and effective communication is key to making it successful. Learn
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how to [ask great questions](../contributing/asking-great-questions.md), and
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explain your decisions clearly [in your commit
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messages](../contributing/commit-discipline.md#commit-messages) and [on your
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pull requests](../contributing/reviewable-prs.md).
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3. **Improvement in response to feedback.** Don't worry if you make
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mistakes in your first few contributions! Everyone makes mistakes
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getting started — just make sure you learn from them!
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We are especially excited about applicants who:
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- Help out other applicants
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- Try to solve their own obstacles, and then [ask well-formed
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questions](/contributing/asking-great-questions)
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- Develop well thought out project proposals
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Starting in 2022, being a student is not required in order to apply to
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GSoC. We are happy to accept both student and non-student GSoC
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participants.
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## Getting started
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If you are new to Zulip, our [contributor
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guide](../contributing/contributing.md) is the place to start. It
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offers a detailed walkthrough for submitting your first pull request,
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with many pointers to additional documentation, and tips on how to get
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help if you need it.
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We recommend taking the following steps before diving into the issue tracker:
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- Join the [Zulip development
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community](https://zulip.com/development-community/), and introduce yourself
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in the stream for the program you are participating in. Before you jump in, be
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sure to review the [Zulip community
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norms](https://zulip.com/development-community/).
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- Follow our instructions to [install the development
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environment](../development/overview.md), getting help in [#provision
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help](https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/21-provision-help) if needed.
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- Familiarize yourself with [using the development
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environment](../development/using.md).
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- Go through the [new application feature
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tutorial](../tutorials/new-feature-tutorial.md) to get familiar with how the
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Zulip codebase is organized, and how to find code in it.
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As you are getting started on your first pull request:
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- Read the [Zulip guide to Git](../git/overview.md). It's especially important
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to master using `git rebase`, so that you can restructure your commits. You can
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get help in [#git help](https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/44-git-help) if
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you get stuck.
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- To make it easier to structure your PRs well, we recommend installing a
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[graphical Git client](../git/setup.md#get-a-graphical-client).
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- Construct [coherent, mergeable
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commits](../contributing/commit-discipline.md), with clear
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commit messages that follow the [Zulip commit style
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guide](../contributing/commit-discipline.md). More broadly, clear
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communication on your pull request will make your work stand out.
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- Carefully follow our [guide to reviewing your own
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code](../contributing/code-reviewing.md) before asking anyone else for a
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review. Catching mistakes yourself will help your PRs be merged faster, and
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folks will appreciate the quality and professionalism of your work.
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Our documentation on [what makes a great Zulip
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contributor](../contributing/contributing.md#what-makes-a-great-zulip-contributor)
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offers some additional advice.
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## Putting together your application
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### What to include
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In addition to following all the instructions for the program you are applying
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to, your application should describe the following:
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- Why you are applying:
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- Why you're excited about working on Zulip.
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- What you are hoping to get out of your participation in the program.
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- How you selected your project.
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- Relevant experience:
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- Summary of your **prior experience with the technologies** used by Zulip.
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- Your **prior contributions to open-source projects** (including pull requests, bug
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reports, etc.), with links.
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- Any other **materials which will help us evaluate how you work**, such as
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links to personal or school projects, along with brief descriptions.
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- Your **contributions to Zulip**, including pull requests, bug reports, and helping
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others in the development community (with links to all materials).
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- A **project proposal** (see below).
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**A note for Outreachy applicants**: It is not practical for us to individually
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help you develop a specific timeline for your application. We expect you to
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submit a project proposal as described below, and will help you manage the
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timeline for your project if your application is selected.
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### Project proposals
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Your first priority during the contribution period should be figuring out how to
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become an effective Zulip contributor. Start developing your project proposal
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only once you have experience with iterating on your PRs to get them ready for
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integration. That way, you'll have a much better idea of what you want to work
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on and how much you can accomplish.
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As [discussed in the guide to having an amazing experience during the
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program](./experience.md#what-about-my-proposal):
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> We have a fluid approach to planning, which means you are very unlikely to end
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> up working on the exact set of issues described in your proposal. Your proposal
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> is not a strict commitment (on either side).
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Your proposal should demonstrate your thoughtfulness about what you want to work
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on, and consideration of project complexity. We will evaluate it based on the
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following criteria:
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- Does it give us a good idea of what areas of Zulip you are most excited to
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work on?
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- Does it demonstrate some familiarity with the Zulip codebase, and reflection
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on what makes for a coherent project that is well-aligned with your interests
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and skill set?
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- Does it demonstrate your ability to put together a reasonable plan? Have you
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thought carefully about the scope of various pieces of your project and their
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dependencies? Are you taking into account the fact that there can be a lot of
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time in software development between having an initial prototype and merging
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the final, fully reviewed and tested, version of your code?
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- Are you proposing a project that would make a significant positive impact on the
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areas you plan to focus on?
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Regardless of which program you are applying to, you can use the [GSoC project
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ideas list](./gsoc.md#project-ideas-by-area) as a source of inspiration for
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putting together your proposal.
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### Circulating your application for feedback
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We highly recommend posting a rough draft of your application at least one week
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before the deadline. That way, the whole development community has a chance to
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give you feedback and help you improve your proposal.
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- If you do not have a complete draft ready, at a minimum, we recommend posting
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your **project proposal**, along with **your contributions to Zulip** for
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context.
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- Please post a link to your draft in the Zulip development community
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stream dedicated to your program (e.g.,
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[#GSoC](https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/14-GSoC) or
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[#Outreachy](https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/391-Outreachy)). Use
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`Your name - project proposal` as the topic.
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- We recommend linking to a draft in an app that works in the browser and allows
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commenting, such as Dropbox Paper or Google Docs.
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