Summary
Congratulations, you’re now a Microsoft Learn contributor! The knowledge you’ve added helps open doors for all, whether they’re trying out a new Microsoft product, searching for code samples, or seeking troubleshooting resources to move forward with their work.
Anyone can become a Microsoft Learn contributor. To share your knowledge on a documentation article, use the workflow discussed here if you’d like to make small, occasional updates. In this module, you’ve defined what it means and why it’s important to contribute to open-source projects like Microsoft Learn. You made minor content changes using a web editor on GitHub. You created, reviewed, and submitted a pull request so that your changes can go live! As you’ve seen, becoming a Microsoft Learn contributor means that you’re helping others build their skills while strengthening your own.
References
- For more information about Microsoft’s Open Source Code of Conduct, see the following resources:
- Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct
- Code of Conduct FAQ
- .NET Foundation Code of Conduct
- Contact [email protected] or [email protected] with any questions or comments.
- If you’re a Microsoft employee, vendor, regular contributor, or contributor who plans on adding new articles or making other large changes: Use the full workflow for contributing.
- To learn more about GitHub, consider the Introduction to GitHub training module.
- Learn.microsoft.com Terms of Use