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Contributors Guide

First, thanks for taking the time to contribute to our project! The following information provides a guide for making contributions.

Code of Conduct

By participating in this project, you agree to abide by the Verizon Media Code of Conduct. Everyone is welcome to submit a pull request or open an issue to improve the documentation, add improvements, or report bugs.

How to Contribute

Contributions are welcome via pull requests and issues. Before submitting a pull request, please make sure all tests pass by running npm test. Please follow our style guide JS and CSS. These style guides are enforced via ESLint.

Improve Documentation

We are always looking to improve our documentation. If you are reading the documentation and something is not clear, or you can't find what you are looking for, then please open an issue with this repository. This gives us a chance to answer your question and to improve the documentation if needed.

Pull requests correcting spelling or grammar mistakes are always welcome.

Issues

Issues Labeling

Yavin uses Standard Issue Labels for Github Issues.

Reporting a Bug

  1. Update to the most recent master release if possible. We may have already fixed your bug.

  2. Search for similar issues. It's possible somebody has encountered this bug already.

  3. Please try to answer at least the following questions when reporting a bug:

    • Which version of the project did you use when you noticed the bug?
    • How do you reproduce the error condition?
    • What happened that you think is a bug?
    • What should it do instead?
    • Please make sure you provide very specific steps to reproduce the error. If we cannot reproduce it, we will close the ticket.
  4. Your issue will be verified. The provided example will be tested for correctness. The Yavin team will work with you until your issue can be verified.

  5. Keep up to date with feedback from the Yavin team on your ticket. Your ticket may be closed if it becomes stale.

  6. If possible, submit a Pull Request with a failing test. Better yet, take a stab at fixing the bug yourself if you can!

The more information you provide, the easier it is for us to validate that there is a bug and the faster we'll be able to take action.

Requesting a Feature

  1. Please provide some thoughtful commentary and code samples on what this feature should do and why it should be added (your use case). Every feature request should answer at least these questions:

    • What will it allow you to do that you can't do today?
    • Why do you need this feature and how will it benefit other users?
    • Are there any drawbacks to this feature?
  2. After discussing the feature you may choose to attempt a Pull Request. If you're able, start writing some code. We always have more work to do than time to do it. If you can write some code then that will speed the process up.

In short, if you have an idea that would be nice to have, create an issue.

How to work with this project locally

  1. Selecting a Feature / Issue to which you wish to contribute
  2. Fork the master repo.
  3. Add a comment in the given issue to let our team know your intentions.
  4. Use the GitHub issue to converse regarding requirements.

Setup

Please refer to Starter Guide

Running tests

npm test

How to fix a bug

If you're fixing a bug that's already been added to the issues, ask yourself whether the bug description is clear. Do you know what circumstances that led to the bug? Does it seem easy to reproduce?

If you've spotted a bug yourself, open an issue and try to answer those questions.

Then start writing some code:

  1. Make the tests fail. Identify what's happening in the bug with a test. This way the bug is reproducible for everyone else in the project, and we won't regress into making the bug ever again (hopefully!).

  2. Make the tests pass again. Write your code that fixes the bug and makes it pass.

Done with your changes?

How to refactor code

Refactoring code shouldn't require any new tests, but you should make sure the tests still pass.

Done with your refactoring?

How to update dependencies

To update a dependency, you will need to follow these steps:

  1. The pull request will contain useful information about what's changed, including breaking changes. You will also want to check the dependency's github and/or npm listing for changelog and recommended updating steps.

  2. Pull down the branch locally.

  3. Update the dependency and perform any steps the project suggests for updating. Sometimes this requires updating other dependencies, changing configuration code, or other tasks.

  4. Build, run, and verify that tests pass.

  5. Verify that everything looks good: Check pages and components that make use of the library and ensure they are still working as expected.

At this point, follow the steps described in Submitting a pull request, but you won't need to open a pull request since one already exists. Mark the pull request as needs code review.

How to write new code

When you're ready to write some new code, you should do the following:

  1. Write some documentation for your change. Why do this first? Well, if you know the behavior you want to see, then it's easier to validate if it works as expected. Think of this as documentation-driven development.

  2. Add a test for your change.

  3. Make the test pass by running npm test

Try to keep your changes to a max of around 200 lines of code whenever possible. Why do this? Apparently the more changes incurred in a pull request, the likelier it is that people who review your code will just gloss over the details. Smaller pull requests get more comments and feedback than larger ones. Crazy, right?

Done with your changes and ready for a review?

Submitting a pull-request?

Sweet, we'd love to accept your contribution! Open a new pull request and fill out the provided form.

If your pull-request addresses an issue then please add the corresponding issue's number to the description of your pull-request.

Please follow the eslint changelog convention for your commit messages.

Here are some things that will increase the chance that your pull-request will get accepted:

  • Did you locally merge (or rebase) the upstream branch into your topic branch?
  • Did you confirm this fix/feature is something that is needed?
  • Did you write tests, preferably in a test driven style?
  • Did you add documentation for the changes you made?
  • Did you follow our style guide JS and CSS?
  • Did you ensure that no errors are generated by ESLint?
  • Did you commit your changes in logical chunks?