There are many ways to make a meaningful contribution to the Clojure community:
Advocate for the use of Clojure in your organization
Use Clojure and share your experience via talks, blogs, etc
Start or join a local meetup
Answer questions in Ask Clojure
Help new Clojure users in Slack or other forums
Create or provide patches to open source libraries
Create or improve Clojure tools
Write guides or reference documentation for libraries
Write intros or getting started guides for tools
Create Clojure podcasts, screencasts, or videos
Give a talk at a conference
Write an article or book
Start a Clojure podcast
Start a Clojure conference or join the organization team for an existing one
Test alpha or beta releases of Clojure on your code base and provide feedback
If you are writing a guide, making an event, or creating a resource, please consider contributing to this web site, clojure.org. All of the content is stored in GitHub and pull requests and issues are accepted. For more information on how to contribute, see the page on contributing to the site. Every page has a link to the corresponding source file in the bottom right corner. If you have an idea for a new guide or updated documentation, please file an issue for discussion.
The Clojure team provides a forum where users can ask questions, submit potential problems, and request enhancements to Clojure, ClojureScript, or Clojure contrib libraries. For all of these cases, please ask a question on the forum. Mark the question with tag problem
for potential problems and request
for enhancements. The community and core team will assess the issue and determine whether to file an issue in the jira tracker. If an issue is filed, the link will be added to the question and it will be tagged with jira
.
If you are looking to provide feedback on an issue in jira, please search the forum for the equivalent issue by title and add your feedback there as an "answer" instead.
The development teams for these languages and libs will use the question votes to prioritize their work in jira towards the next release.
Clojure was created by Rich Hickey and is developed by a core team of developers at Nubank, which supports this work. The Clojure development team values a measured and thoughtful approach to language evolution with a strong emphasis on maintaining backward compatibility. See Development for more information on Clojure development.
If you would like to provide a patch on a specific ticket in the jira tracker, please follow the process to become a contributor.