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Help Stumpless Do Better, Suck Less

Stumpless aims to do a small thing well while staying as small as possible. If you've got a problem with the project, you have a great idea for a new feature, or you just want to find a way to contribute, then check out the guidelines below on how to get started. Also, please make sure that you adhere to the Code of Conduct however you participate.

I know what I'm doing

If you're a regular user of the library and know it pretty well, you can give back to the community just by helping out others who have a question. Head over to the project's gitter room and if there is a question that you can help with, don't hesitate to jump in!

It broke

If you've got a problem with the project, please make sure that you've done the following things before submitting an issue:

  • Review the documentation to ensure that the behavior is unintentional
  • Search through the other issues on the project to ensure that this is not already captured
  • Replicate the problem from the latest version branch

If you've completed all of these steps and the problem persists, submit an issue on the GitHub project using the provided issue template with all information filled in.

Even better: if you know how to fix the issue, go ahead and submit a pull request using the provided template, mentioning the corresponding issue number.

I'm helping!

Made some changes and want to share your work? Great! Submit a pull request and we'll review it for inclusion into the latest version. Make sure that you follow these guidelines:

  • If you're working on something that's relatively small, then you don't need to worry about the number of commits in your branch, as it will be squashed before it is merged into the latest branch. If you're working on something marked as a good first issue for example, don't worry about keeping a clean commit history and just focus on the fun stuff! You will be retained as the author of the commit, to make sure that contribution credit is reflected in the commit history and on GitHub.
  • If you're working on something larger, squashing it into a single commit might not make a lot of sense, and so the number of commits becomes more important. If you find yourself in this situation, try to make sure that each commit is logical and adds value to the commit history. If you need a little guidance to get started with adjusting the commit history of your change, check out this chapter from the Git Book about it, which covers several common adjustments. Note that this scenario will be rare, and if you aren't sure if it applies to your change then you should ask before going down the complex and time-consuming path of rebasing.
  • If a commit resolves or is otherwise related to a particular issue, include a reference to it in the body of the commit.

It would be great if...

If you have a new feature that you think would be worthwhile, please open an issue on the github project using the 'Feature Request' template. If it fits with the project then you can begin working on a fork and submit a pull request of your branch so that we can watch it progress and merge it in once it is complete. Or if you don't have time we will add it to the project roadmap and eventually implement it depending on other priorities.

Things we don't accept

We appreciate anyone looking to contribute to the project! However, we also need to make sure that we make the best use our time spent supporting the project and its contributors. For this reason, some types of contributions will not be accepted by the project team. We ask potential contributors to review this list and make sure that they steer clear of these types of pull requests:

  • Corrections of obvious spelling errors and grammatical problems may be accepted on a case-by-case basis, based on the severity of the problem addressed. Changes of this nature have a higher probability of being accepted if there are more changes in them than a single one. Put simply, if you want to do a proofreading contribution, you need to proofread more than a single document, and not stop after finding a single problem. We strongly recommend you spend your time contributing in some other way.
  • Changes of capitalization, punctuation, or other style choices will not be accepted.

I don't know where to start

If you'd like to contribute but aren't quite sure where to start, take a look at the issues and see if there is anything there that you think you can tackle! In particular, the 'help wanted' and 'good first issue' labels mark issues that need attention and are relatively simple to fix, respectively.

The development notes have a getting started section for newcomers to the project, and are worth a read.

No, I mean I really don't know where to start

If you are brand new to the community at large and are looking for a little more detail on how to contribute, then this section should help you get started.

Stumpless has a default branch named latest off of which all new feature branches are based. Once all changes planned for the next version have been implemented, a tag will be added for the commit named after the semantic version number and the release branch will be updated to point to this commit. In this way, latest always has the most up to date changes and release always points to the last complete version released.

To create your own feature or update, you should fork the repository and create a new branch based on the latest branch. Don't forget to update the ChangeLog with your changes, and when you're ready open a pull request against latest.

It is unusual, but you may find that it is more appropriate to base your branch on the release branch instead of latest. Some examples of these types of changes are:

  • updates to project documentation that is relevant to the current version of the project as well as the next
  • patches that need to be applied to the current version of the library in order to fix broken functionality (note that this will require updating the library to the next patch level, for example from 1.3.2 to 1.3.3)

Be sure to check out the dependencies list to make sure that your development environment has all of the necessary tools. More specifically, make sure that you are able to run the tests and development tools before you make extensive changes, so that you can test iteratively as you go.

A detailed tutorial on the traditional git flow style of development is beyond the scope of the project documentation, but the following guides serve as good starting material:

To recap, your basic steps will be to fork the repository, create a new branch based on latest (or perhaps release depending on the circumstances), and when you are finished adding commits to it create a pull request back to the main repository.

You still there?

The project team aims to be as responsive as we can, typically responding to new issues and pull requests within a few days. Asking for clarification on an issue or requesting changes to a pull request is fairly common, and often some back and forth is needed before something can be accepted.

Unfortunately, sometimes these conversations stall and no progress is made. In cases where this happens and the project team is waiting for a response, the item will eventually be closed as stale. Items that have had no response for two months will be labeled as stale, and a warning will be posted in the discussion. If another month passes with no response, then the item will be closed as stale.

Stale items can always be reopened, so don't feel like the discussion is over forever if something gets closed! We just want to keep our active work nice and tidy for everyone to quickly see what we're doing (and what we aren't).

Thanks!

And no matter how you contribute, thanks for giving back to the community!

Stumpless Team