CodeMirror 6 language package for karol
TODO
Please abide by the following guidelines to keep the repository as clean as possible. As a general rule we require all commits to be signed.
All feature and refactor branches must stem from the development
branch and have to be merged back into it by pull requests.
The branchnames have to adhere to the following pattern:
[type]/[name]
The following types can be used:
- feature: adding new functionality
- refactor: changing code without introducing new features
- bugfix: fixing a bug
- docs: update documentation without changing production code
After all the features that will be included in the next release have been merged into master, you can create a new branch named release/version
.
No new features may be added to this release branch. The only acceptable commits to release branches are:
- small tidying up task
- bumping the version
- fixes
Hotfix branches may be created from master and merged directly back into it. They have to be named hotfix/issue
The master branch only contains tagged commits corresponding to software releases!
To create a new release merge a release or hotfix branch into master and create a new tag (v1.2.3
).
To keep our repository tidy all commits have to adhere to the Conventional Commit Guidelines. You can find a brief summary below:
- Structure:
<type>[optional scope]: <description>
[optional body]
[optional footer(s)]
-
We use the following types:
- fix: Fixes a bug
- feat: Adds a new feature
- refactor: Changes code but doesn't add new features
- docs: Updates doc files
- test: Updates tests but doesn't touch production code
-
Breaking changes: If an update introduces breaking changes add a
!
after the type (and scope) and optionally add theBREAKING CHANGE
footer.
The commit message should also follow these rules:
- Separate subject from body with a blank line
- Limit the subject line to 50 characters
- Capitalize the subject line
- Do not end the subject line with a period
- Use the imperative mood in the subject line
- Wrap the body at 72 characters
- Use the body to explain what and why vs. how