Development:Developer documentation: Difference between revisions

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The [[Development:Overview|overview of the Moodle development process]] explains how Moodle development occurs and how people become Moodle developers. Current plans are listed on the [[Roadmap]].
The [[Development:Overview|overview of the Moodle development process]] explains how Moodle development occurs and how people become Moodle developers. Current plans are listed on the [[Roadmap]].


You can also enrol in one of the [http://dev.moodle.org Moodle Developer Courses].
You can also enrol in one of the [http://dev.moodle.org Moodle Developer Courses].Offline Activity - teachers provide a description and due date for an assignment outside of Moodle. A grade & feedback can be recorded in Moodle.


==Guidelines==
==Guidelines==

Revision as of 17:02, 17 June 2010

moodle-development-logo.jpg

This Developer section of Moodle Docs is aimed at developers who contribute to the Moodle code, plugins, themes, and so on.


Note: New developer documentation pages should be added to the Development namespace by typing Development: before the new page name i.e. [[Development:New page name]]. If you are a developer, you probably want to change your preferences to include the Development namespace in searches.

A page may be added to the Developer category by adding the template {{CategoryDeveloper}} to the bottom of the page. - If required, you can use [[Category:Developer|Sort key]] to provide a sort key other than the default page name.

How Moodle development works

The overview of the Moodle development process explains how Moodle development occurs and how people become Moodle developers. Current plans are listed on the Roadmap.

You can also enrol in one of the Moodle Developer Courses.Offline Activity - teachers provide a description and due date for an assignment outside of Moodle. A grade & feedback can be recorded in Moodle.

Guidelines

The following guidelines are crucial reading for anyone wanting to contribute to the Moodle code base:

Documentation for core components

This section is for documentation of specific components of the existing core Moodle code. Discussion of components that are under discussion or in development can be found in the developer notes or on the roadmap.

The documents below give a general overview. For detailed function-by-function documentation, see the phpDocumentor documentation that is automatically generated from the comments in the code.

And don't forget that the most up-to-date and detailed description of how the code works is the code itself, and you can browse the code online using PHPXref.

Core components that affect everything

Core libraries with a more specific uses

Modules included in the standard distribution

How you can contribute

Make a new plugin

The M in Moodle stands for modular, and the easiest, most maintainable way to add new functionality to Moodle is by using one of the many plugin APIs. There are many types of plugin you can write:

General information that applies to all types of plugins

Please see the Guidelines for contributed code for an overview of how to contribute to the Moodle code.

Sometimes it is not possible to write a proper plugin for what you want to do, in which case you may have to resort to using the local customisations hook.

Change core code

Some types of change can only be made by editing the core Moodle code. Such changes are much harder to maintain than plugins. If you want your core change to be considered for inclusion in the official Moodle release, you need to create an issue in the tracker, and attach your change as a patch. It is also a good idea to discuss your ideas in the forums first. See Development:Overview#Major_Development for more details.

Ways to contribute that do not involve PHP programming

Plans for the future

Ideas for and details of planned future features of Moodle are initially discussed on the forums in the Using Moodle course at moodle.org. That developer discussions are intermixed with user discussions in the same forums may seem strange at first but is one of the reasons for the success of Moodle. It is important that both end-users and developers discuss the future features together.

Once ideas begin to crystallize on the forums they can be summarized in this wiki, either as part of the roadmap or in the form of developer notes. These pages then form the basis for further discussion in the forums.

Resources

Tools

Some tools people use when working on Moodle code:

IDEs

Browser add-ons

Miscellaneous

See also: Useful Development Tools forumin the Introduction to Moodle Programming course

See also