Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
66 lines (51 loc) · 5.12 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

66 lines (51 loc) · 5.12 KB

Contributing

The development of Scratch is an ongoing process, and we love to have people in the Scratch and open source communities help us along the way.

Ways to Help

  • Documenting bugs

    • If you've identified a bug in Scratch you should first check to see if it's been filed as an issue, if not you can file one. Make sure you follow the issue template.
    • It's important that we can consistently reproduce issues. When writing an issue, be sure to follow our reproduction step guidelines.
      • Some issues are marked "Needs Repro". Adding a comment with good reproduction steps to those issues is a great way to help.
    • If you don't have an issue in mind already, you can look through the Bugs & Glitches forum. Look for users reporting problems, reproduce the problem yourself, and file new issues following our guidelines.
  • Fixing bugs

    • You can request to fix a bug in a comment on the issue if you at mention the repo coordinator, who for this repo is @chrisgarrity.

      • If the issue is marked "Help Wanted" you can go ahead and start working on it!
    • We will only accept Pull Requests for bugs that have an issue filed that has a priority label

      • If you're interested in fixing a bug with no issue, file the issue first and wait for it to have a priority added to it.
    • We are not looking for Pull Requests ("PR") for every issue and may deny a PR if it doesn't fit our criteria.

      • We are far more likely to accept a PR if it is for an issue marked with Help Wanted.
      • We will not accept PRs for issues marked with "Needs Discussion" or "Needs Design."
      • Wait until the Repo Coordinator assigns the issue to you before you begin work or submit a PR.

Learning Git and Github

If you want to work on fixing issues, you should be familiar with Git and Github.

Important: we follow the Github Flow process as our development process.

How to Fix Bugs

  1. Identify which Github issue you are working on. Leave a comment on the issue to let us (and other contributors) know you're working on it.
  2. Make sure you have a fork of this repo (see Github's forking a repo for details)
  3. Switch to the develop branch, and pull down the latest changes from upstream
  4. Run the code, and reproduce the problem
  5. Create your branch from the develop branch
  6. Make code changes to fix the problem
  7. Run npm test to make sure that your changes pass our tests
  8. Commit your changes
  9. Push your branch to your fork
  10. Create your pull request
    1. Make sure to follow the template in the PR description
    2. Remember to check the “Allow edits from maintainers” box

When submitting pull requests keep in mind:

  • please be patient -- it can take a while to find time to review them
  • try to change the least amount of code necessary to fix the bug
  • the code can't be radically changed without significant coordination with the Scratch Team, so these types of changes should be avoided
  • if you find yourself changing a substantial amount of code or considering radical changes, please ask for clarification -- we may have envisioned a different approach, or underestimated the amount of effort

Suggestions

Block sketch

Please note: we are unlikely to accept PRs with new features that haven't been thought through and discussed as a group.

Why? Because we have a strong belief in the value of keeping things simple for new users. It's been said that the Scratch Team spends about one hour of design discussion for every pixel in Scratch. To learn more about our design philosophy, see the Scratch Developers page, or this paper.

We welcome suggestions! If you want to suggest a feature, please post in our suggestions forum. Your suggestion will be helped if you include a mockup design; this can be simple, even hand-drawn.

Other resources

Beyond this repo, there are also some other resources that you might want to take a look at: