Miroslav Mitev is an experienced Quality Assurance leader with 12 years in game and gambling software, progressing from QA tester to Manager of QA at Euro Games Technology. He combines hands-on test planning and execution for slot machines and online games with practical knowledge of SAS protocols, game configuration and jackpot systems. Adept with tools like Bugzilla, TestLink, Jira and phpMyAdmin, he also brings programming familiarity in C#, HTML and CAD tools (AutoCAD, SolidWorks) that help bridge QA and engineering teams. An active back-end contributor to notable open-source WordPress projects such as Carbon Fields and Sensei LMS, he has fixed bugs, improved option handling and addressed UI/JS issues in production plugins. Based in Varna, Bulgaria, Miroslav pairs methodical QA processes with a knack for debugging complex integrations and a background in both textile engineering and defense economics that reflects unusual cross-disciplinary thinking.
12 years of coding experience
11 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Science (BSc), Textile Engineering and Technologies, Bachelor of Science (BSc), Textile Engineering and Technologies at Technical University of Sofia
Master of Science (MSc), Economics of Defence and Security, Master of Science (MSc), Economics of Defence and Security at University of National and World Economy
Contributions:8 releases, 894 reviews, 636 commits in 1 year 2 months
Contributions summary:Miroslav primarily focused on back-end development tasks, evident through bug fixes and feature implementations involving PHP, WordPress, and database interactions. Their contributions include resolving issues in the lesson functionality and creating filters, indicating their expertise in the core features of the Sensei LMS plugin. The code modifications involved altering the behavior of lesson and quiz modules, and user enrolment systems.
Contributions:6 releases, 109 commits, 40 PRs in 3 years 5 months
Contributions summary:Miroslav primarily contributed to the WordPress custom fields library. Their work involved adding and modifying methods within the `Carbon_Field` class, notably focusing on the `set_options()` and `add_options()` methods to support callback functions. They also addressed bugs related to option merging and implemented CSS fixes. Furthermore, they modified JavaScript files to fix issues with the map field and rich text editor.
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