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Konqi and the KDE community

Welcome to the KDE Community Wiki! This is the working area for community members and contributors and contains information they need to collaborate on projects and goals. This wiki also has guides for getting involved with the community, setting up a development environment for building KDE software, reporting bugs, translating products, and getting in touch with the different KDE teams and projects.

If you are interested in how to use KDE Frameworks and libraries for your software, please take a peek at the TechBase wiki for guides and tutorials.

Note

Before editing the wiki, look at Help:Contribute#Organisation to see where to add content. KDE operates two other wikis, listed at https://wiki.kde.org/


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Community Information Hub

Information useful across many projects, or for the KDE community as a whole.


Get Involved

New to KDE? If you want to start contributing, start here.

Policies

Policies covering development of KDE software. Related: Guidelines and how-tos

Schedules

Upcoming freezes and release dates for KDE's main products.

Events

Conferences, sprints and other events in KDE, including Akademy.

Infrastructure

Infrastructure provided for KDE projects, such as source control and systems for translators.

Guidelines and how-tos

Guidelines for creating good software, and helpful information for contributors that is not project-specific.

Keynotes and presentations

Keynotes and presentations by the KDE community.

Community Management and Coordination

These teams help keep the KDE community running smoothly by providing support, administration and arbitration:


Things to deal with:

  • KDE.org Websites
    • KDE Forums - Information about forum.kde.org for developers and contributors
    • KDE Student Programs - Functional guide of season.kde.org for students, mentors and admins
  • KDE — various documentation affecting the entire community

Cross-Project Teams

These teams work on areas common across lots of projects, sharing their expertise and working on tasks that individual projects often don't have the resources to manage on their own.

Projects

These are pages for specific projects. These can be pieces or collections of software, specific websites or other relatively self-contained areas of work.

Subcommunities

These are groups that come together based on shared experiences, rather than because they are working on the same thing.