Proposal: Gutenberg Developer Hours series of events.

  • Summary: Proposal for a new event: Every other week, invite WordPress developers to meet with 3 developers and discuss your GutenbergGutenberg The Gutenberg project is the new Editor Interface for WordPress. The editor improves the process and experience of creating new content, making writing rich content much simpler. It uses ‘blocks’ to add richness rather than shortcodes, custom HTML etc. https://wordpress.org/gutenberg/ development questions, code, ideas, and approaches. Follow-up w/ video and resources.
  • Start Date: Soon.
  • Trial period: 4 events.
  • Producer: Birgit Pauli-Haack + Gutenberg Developer Volunteers. 

Background: 

I used to do in-person walk-in clinics for a volunteer internet service provider, where we answered all kinds of questions. If there was a moment with no questions, I would pull a topic out of my hat, talk for five minutes and get another 10 questions that triggered in people’s heads. The place was always packed. Not everyone is comfortable dealing with an unknown set of questions, but when done right, it’s quite fun and interesting. Of course, there were always questions that were too specific or too advanced. We would take note of it and answer them either the following week or via email directly to the attendee. 

I would like to try this in a remote setting with a panel of three developers from the community, who are experienced with working with blocks, and call it Gutenberg Developer Hours. 

Details on Gutenberg Developer Hours

I have heard from many in the community that although there is developer documentation available, it’s hard to get started. When developers hit roadblocks, it also takes a long time to troubleshoot errors and bugs. 

This is an offering to developers new to Gutenberg, to get questions answered or obtain advice on architecture or approach. Having a panel helps with the broad set of topics, distributes the load and takes away the fear of being confronted alone with a question, one might not be able to answer. 

Attendees could bring code issues and talk about those, “I’ve been working on this project, but I hit a roadblock and I have no idea where to go from here.”

As a moderator, I can jump in and ask questions to bridge the silence if we, attendees and panelists, run out of audience questions.

Furthermore, if a question gets too specific or too advanced, the moderator makes a note of it, discusses with the dev team and gets back to the attendee with a response after the event. That could be:

  • an invitation to office hours, 
  • a set of documentation, or 
  • a blogblog (versus network, site) post inspired by the question. 

It’s certainly part of the trial to find out where the boundaries of this support offerings are. 

At the beginning, I envision a frequency of every other week, once there is a pool of volunteer developer panelists available to schedule.

To get attendees interested, it might help to have a short educational segment that people are interested in for the first two or three shows.

The panelists could also pick a topic like:

  • How to tap into Gutenberg filters and hooksHooks In WordPress theme and development, hooks are functions that can be applied to an action or a Filter in WordPress. Actions are functions performed when a certain event occurs in WordPress. Filters allow you to modify certain functions. Arguments used to hook both filters and actions look the same.?
  • How to add a button to the toolbar?
  • What is a store in ReactJS? 
  • How to add BlockBlock Block is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. Styles?

For promotion, social channels like Twitter and Facebook and make.wordpress.orgWordPress.org The community site where WordPress code is created and shared by the users. This is where you can download the source code for WordPress core, plugins and themes as well as the central location for community conversations and organization. https://wordpress.org/ will be used.

Each show will be recorded and transcribed. The moderator will communicate the recording part with the attendees and If an attendee rather wants to ask their question outside the recording, the moderator can hit the pause button. 

In post-production, the recording can be cut into smaller educational units and publish it publicly on WordPress.tv. The producers can pull specific questions that stumped the panel and write a separate tutorial about it. The show is not a ‘webinar’ but a normal Zoom meeting, so people can see each other and share their screens and code.

At least for the trial, registration is required. The producers will, of course, respect the attendee’s privacy and use email addresses only for communication regarding the specific Gutenberg Developer Hour session.

I already approached a few developers to be our resident experts with the idea, they committed to want to try it. Depending on the feedback, this initiative can be started fairly soon. If you are a Gutenberg developer with some experience and would like to be part of this initiative, please let me know in the comments.

Administrative tasks:

  • Schedule the Gutenberg Developer Hours, one at a time. 
    • Set-up Zoom space, with registration.
    • Announce the next session via social channels, Make/Project, Gutenberg Times, and other available channels. 
  • Connect with the volunteers on a regular basis so they can schedule themselves. 
  • Recruit volunteers as panelists, moderators and content producers. 
  • Published post with resources and solutions.

If you want to be part of the team working on this initiative, let us know in the comments. I will connect with you via WordPress SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/.. Your comments and suggestions are appreciated.

Please don’t hesitate to connect with me on WP Slack @bph if you have additional questions.


Thank You to @annezazu, @daisyo, and @sparklingrobots for collaboration and refinement of the initiative.
Props @jeffpaul and @audrasjb for peer review.

#gutenberg, #new-contributors