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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing Guide

Contributing to angular-translate is fairly easy. This document shows you how to get the project, run all provided tests and generate a production-ready build.

It also covers provided grunt tasks that help you develop with angular-translate.

Dependencies

To make sure that the following instructions work, please install the following dependencies on you machine:

  • Node.js (comes with a bundles npm)
  • Git

Installation

To get the source of angular-translate, clone the git repository via:

$ git clone https://github.com/angular-translate/angular-translate

This will clone the complete source to your local machine. Navigate to the project folder and install all needed dependencies via npm:

$ npm install

This commands installs everything which is required for building and testing the project.

Testing

Internally angular-translate depends on Grunt, however we have masked all steps behind simple tasks processed by npm.

Source linting: npm run lint

npm run lint performs a lint for all, also part of test.

Unit testing: npm run test

npm run test executes (as you might think) the unit tests, which are located in test/unit. The task uses karma, the spectacular test runner, to execute the tests with the jasmine testing framework.

Testing of different scopes: npm run test-scopes

Because angular-translate supports multiple different versions of AngularJS 1.x, we also test the code against these.

npm run test-scopes performs a npm run test against each registered scope which can be found at /test_scopes/*.

Testing headless: npm run test-headless

Just like npm run test, the command npm run test-headless performs the test against a headless PhantomJS. Maybe useful in case of automatic tests.

Building

Standard build

You will probably being never required using the command npm run build, because it will create a production-ready build of angular-translate. This task will also lint, test and minify the source. After running this task, you'll find the following files in a generated /distfolder:

dist/angular-translate-x.x.x.js
dist/angular-translate-x.x.x.min.js

Compile only

The command npm run compile creates production-ready files at /dist, also part of npm run build.

dist/angular-translate-x.x.x.js
dist/angular-translate-x.x.x.min.js

Developing

grunt watch

This task will watch all relevant files. When it notices a change, it'll run the lint and test tasks. Use this task while developing on the source to make sure that every time you make a change, you get notified if your code is inconsistent or doesn't pass the tests.

grunt dev

This task extends watch. In addition, it will lint, test and copy the result into demo/. After this, just like watch, it will run these steps every time a file has changed. On top of that, this task supports live reloading (on default port).

This task works in harmony with npm run start-demo.

npm run start-demo

This task provides a simple http server on port 3005. If you start it on your machine, you have access to the project`s demos with real XHR operations.

Example: http://localhost:3005/demo/async-loader/index.html

Under the hood, we use a complete Express server stack. You will find the server configuration at server.js and additional routes for our demos at demo/server_routes.js.

Contributing/Submitting changes

  • Check out a new branch based on canary and name it to what you intend to do:
    • Example:
      $ git checkout -b BRANCH_NAME origin/canary
      
      If you get an error, you may need to fetch canary first by using
      $ git remote update && git fetch
      
    • Use one branch per fix/feature
  • Make your changes
    • Make sure to provide a spec for unit tests.
    • Run your tests with either karma start or grunt test.
    • In order to verify everything will work in the other test scopes (different AngularJS version), please run npm run test-scopes. If you are getting a dependency resolution issue, run npm run clean-test-scopes and try again.
    • When all tests pass, everything's fine.
  • Commit your changes
  • Make a pull request
    • Make sure you send the PR to the canary branch.
    • Travis CI is watching you!

If you follow these instructions, your PR will land pretty safely in the main repo!