FreeCAD-manual

An experiment at reorganizing the contents of the FreeCAD wiki in an easier, friendlier book-like manner. The manual is now hosted on the FreeCAD wiki

View the Project on GitHub yorikvanhavre/FreeCAD-manual

The Community

No manual dealing with free and open-source software would be complete without a chapter about the community. As the vast majority of free and open-source software projects, FreeCAD is made and maintained by a community. Instead of the opaque, unknown, impersonal and inaccessible firm that is more than often found behind commercial software, free and open-source software communities are open spaces, where you as a user are welcome, and where you can get answers very fast, and even have your say in the development of the software itself. You are also more than welcome to help, there are tasks for everybody.

The community is a growing, eclectic group of all kinds of people united by their passion for FreeCAD. All work on FreeCAD voluntarily, during their free time (some of the developers also get funding from donations or crowdfunding). Some are professional programmers, some are long-time FreeCAD users (some of them are true FreeCAD gurus, who know almost everything, and many of them end up knowing a lot about FreeCAD programming too), and many are new users of FreeCAD. There is nothing specific to do to be part of the community. Just use FreeCAD!

The main place where the community meets and discusses is the FreeCAD forum. All you need to do to participate to the discussions is to register an account on the forum (Your first post will need to be approved by a moderator before you can post more, to prevent spamming). The forum is a great place to ask questions when you are new to FreeCAD. Provided you made a good question (be sure to read the forum rules as they contain useful information to turn your question into a good question), you will usually get several replies within the same hour. If you think someone might have asked your question already, be sure to search, your answer might already be there.

The forum is also a great place to show what you achieved with FreeCAD, to help newcomers when you are more experienced, and to follow and give your opinions in more technical discussions about development. All the FreeCAD development is discussed on the forum, and anybody is free to read or participate.

There are also FreeCAD communities forming outside of the FreeCAD forum, for example on Facebook.

If you are becoming as enthusiastic about FreeCAD as we are, you might want to help the project. This can be done in many different ways, and there are tasks for everybody, programmers and non-programmers, for example:

The source code of FreeCAD is located on the Github account of the FreeCAD project. Anybody can download, use and modify the code. You can publish your modifications (on Github or any other Git hosting service). If you made interesting modifications, that you wish to see included in the FreeCAD source code, you must ask the community to have them included. This can be done using Github’s pull requests mechanism, but the very best way is to discuss what you intend to do first on the forum, and then post a pull request later when your code is ready. This avoids that you work on something that someone else is already working on too, and ensures that others agree with the way you are doing it, so there is no risk of having your work refused for some reason you didn’t foresee.

Hopefully, we managed to give you a good taste of FreeCAD in this manual, and you are already our newest community member. Welcome!


Read more