![]() We aim for a transparent and open development process that invites the whole user community to contribute. We welcome PHP programmers of course, but you can also contribute through discussions, testing, feedback and documentation.
DevelopersThe main development of Moodle is led by the core team at Moodle.com, helped by hundreds of other developers around the world. Many of these developers are also directly responsible for various modules and plugins.
► Credits Developer documentationThe bulk of our documentation is in Moodle Docs - including specifications, brainstorms, procedures, standards and finished user guides.
Moodle TrackerAll development issues (such as bugs, new features and improvements) are recorded and managed in the Moodle Tracker. You can see who is working on what, and contribute to any conversation. You should search in the tracker first if you are trying to find out about specific issues, and please make sure you vote on the issues you most want to see fixed, as your votes help determine development priorities.
Open source code |


