Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
56 lines (44 loc) · 2.47 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

56 lines (44 loc) · 2.47 KB

Contributing

Here are some guidelines that we'd like contributors to follow so that we can have a chance of keeping things right.

Getting Starting

  • Make sure you have a GitHub account
  • Submit a ticket for your issue if one does not already exist
    • Clearly describe the issue including steps to reproduce when it is a bug
    • Include the earliest version that you know has the issue
  • Fork the repository on GitHub
  • Read the INSTALL.md file

Making Changes

  • Create a topic branch from where you want to base your work
    • This is usually the master branch
    • Only target release branches if you are certain your fix must be on that branch
    • To quickly create a topic branch based on master; git branch fix/master/my_contribution master then checkout the new branch with git checkout fix/master/my_contribution
    • Avoid working directly on the master branch
  • Make commits of logical units
  • Check for unnecessary whitespace with git diff --check before committing
  • Make sure your commit messages are in the proper format
  • Avoid updating the distributable file or annotated source code documentation
(#99999) Make the example in CONTRIBUTING imperative and concrete

Without this patch applied the example commit message in the CONTRIBUTING document is not a
concrete example. This is a problem because the contributor is left to imagine what the commit
message should look like based on a description rather than an example. This patch fixes the
problem by making the example concrete and imperative.

The first line is a real life imperative statement with a ticket number from our issue tracker. The
body describes the behavior without the patch, why this is a problem, and how the patch fixes the
problem when applied.

Submitting Changes

  • Ensure you added your details to AUTHORS.md in the correct format Joe Bloggs <joe.bloggs@example.com>
  • Push your changes to a topic branch in your fork of the repository
  • Submit a pull request to Template's repository
  • Update your issue to mark that you have submitted code and are ready for it to be reviewed
    • Include a link to the pull request in the issue

Additional Resources