Majid Mallis is a seasoned software engineer with a decade of experience building developer-facing SDKs and backend systems, now contributing to Google from San Francisco. He led developer product incubation at DocuSign, producing industry-leading JavaScript and Java SDKs, sample apps, and community evangelism while also fixing subtle serialization and testing issues in prominent open-source clients. His background spans telecommunications at Ericsson, printing-suite development, and academic simulation tools, giving him a rare blend of API design, systems debugging, and user-facing tooling expertise. Comfortable across the full stack, he pairs hands-on coding and QA improvements with clear technical documentation and cross-team collaboration. Academically trained in mathematics, computer science and computer engineering, he brings both rigorous problem-solving and a research-minded curiosity to practical product engineering.
10 years of coding experience
13 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor's Degree, Mathematics and Computer Science, B. Sc., Bachelor's Degree, Mathematics and Computer Science, B. Sc. at Université Laval
Master's Degree, Computer Engineering, M. Eng., Master's Degree, Computer Engineering, M. Eng. at École Polytechnique de Montréal
The Official Docusign C# Client Library used to interact with the eSignature REST API. Send, sign, and approve documents using this client.
Role in this project:
Back-end Developer & QA Engineer
Contributions:2 releases, 9 reviews, 42 commits in 2 years 11 months
Contributions summary:Majid primarily focused on addressing serialization issues within the C# client library, specifically related to `TemplateTabs`. They corrected a typo and fixed serialization problems with `numberTabs` and `dateTabs`. Additionally, the user updated the project's testing infrastructure by using the correct version of NUnit and added missing imports to unit test files. This suggests a focus on ensuring the library's functionality and testing its code.
Find and Hire Top DevelopersWe’ve analyzed the programming source code of over 60 million software developers on GitHub and scored them by 50,000 skills. Sign-up on Prog,AI to search for software developers.