Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
33 lines (26 loc) · 2.19 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

33 lines (26 loc) · 2.19 KB

All PSyclone development is coordinated through GitHub Issues and Pull Requests.

Before creating a new Issue, please check that the feature or problem you are considering is not already discussed in the User Guide or Developers' Guide or covered by the existing list of Issues. If in doubt, please create a new Issue and give it the question label to mark it for attention.

If this is the first time you have performed PSyclone development work then you will probably want to read the Getting Going section of the User Guide and the Working with PSyclone from GitHub section of the Developers' Guide. You may also find the Reference Guide useful for understanding the overall code structure.

When creating a new Issue, please give it a descriptive title, possibly including the key component of PSyclone involved in square brackets, e.g. "[PSyIR] Add support for some arkane Fortran feature". In the description please provide a summary of the problem or the feature that the Issue is intended to tackle.

During development work please use the Issue to make notes of any design decisions or problems encountered. Please also tag all commit messages with the Issue number e.g.:

git commit -m "#111 make an amazing change" some/modified/file.py

so that all related commits will show up in the Issue.

PSyclone is written in Python which brings with it a host of benefits. However, Python is also very flexible and with great flexibility comes great responsibility. The PSyclone project therefore has fairly strict coding and documentation standards in order to ensure the robustness and maintainability of the code base. The coding standards are summarised on the code-review page of the GitHub PSyclone wiki. Similarly, the requirements for in-code documentation are also on the wiki.