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contributing.md

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Contributing to BurnMan

BurnMan is a community project that lives by the participation of its members — i.e., including you! It is our goal to build an inclusive and participatory community so we are happy that you are interested in participating!

Getting started with git and GitHub

GitHub provides a helpful guide on the process of contributing to an open-source project here.

Asking and answering questions about BurnMan

For questions about BurnMan on all levels, please use the BurnMan forum.

Bug reports

It is a great help to the community if you report any bugs that you may find. We keep track of all open issues related to BurnMan here.

Please follow these simple instructions before opening a new bug report:

  • Do a quick search in the list of open and closed issues for a duplicate of your issue.
  • If you did not find an answer, open a new issue and explain your problem in as much detail as possible.
  • Attach as much as possible of the following information to your issue:
    • a minimal script that reproduces the issue,
    • the error message you saw on your screen,
    • any information that helps us understand why you think this is a bug, and how to reproduce it.

Making BurnMan better

BurnMan is a community project, and we are encouraging all kinds of contributions. Obvious candidates are bugfixes and implementations of new datasets or fitting routines. Other much appreciated contributions are new examples, tests, benchmarks, fixing typos or updating outdated documentation. If you consider making a large addition or change to core functionality, please open a new issue first, to discuss your idea with one of the maintainers. This allows us to give you early feedback and prevents you from spending much time on a project that might already be planned, or that conflicts with other plans.

Opening pull requests

To make a change to BurnMan you should:

  • Create a fork (through GitHub) of the code base.
  • Create a new branch (sometimes called a feature branch) on which to make your modifications.
  • You can propose that your branch be merged into the BurnMan code by opening a pull request. This will give others a chance to review your code.

We follow the philosophy that no pull request (independent of the author) is merged without a review from one other member of the community, and approval of one of the maintainers. This applies to maintainers as well as to first-time contributors. We know that review can be a daunting process, but pledge to keep all comments friendly and supportive. We are as interested in making BurnMan better as you are!

While this seems very formal, keeping all of the code review in one place makes it easier to coordinate changes to the code. Please do not hesitate to ask questions about the workflow on the forum if you are not sure what to do.

Coding conventions

Since BurnMan is a growing project with several contributors we use black to keep the style of the source code consistent. See the project file for the most recent version. Indentation and other code standardisation is achieved by running the indent script. If you are new to the project then we will work with you to ensure your contributions are formatted with this style, so please do not think of it as a road block if you would like to contribute some code.

Changelog entries

If your new pull request creates a change that is noticeable to BurnMan users, please add a new file to our changelog folder. The name of the file consists of the date of the change (approximately) and the name of the author. Use the existing files for a guide to the format. This ensures you will get credit for your work.

Acknowledgment of contributions

The BurnMan community is grateful for every contribution! But, beyond this gratitude, there are also several formal ways in which your contribution will be acknowledged by the BurnMan community:

  • Every commit that is merged into the BurnMan repository makes you part of the group of contributors.

  • For every release the most significant entries of our changelog are selected to generate our release announcements. Additionally, all entries remain available within the docs/changelog directory.

  • If you contributed a significant part of the manual, you will be listed as one of the contributing authors of the manual.

  • Significant contributions will lead to your name being included in the AUTHORS file in the main repository. Criteria for inclusion:

    • A profound understanding of BurnMan's structure and vision;
    • A proven willingness to further the project's goals and help other users;
    • Significant contributions to BurnMan (not necessarily only source code, also mailing list advice, documentation, benchmarks, tutorials);
    • Contributions to BurnMan for more than one year.

License

BurnMan is published under the GPL v2 or newer; while you will retain copyright on your contributions, all changes to the code must be provided under this common license.