👍🎉 First off, thanks for taking the time to contribute! 🎉👍
We love your input! We want to make contributing to this project as easy and transparent as possible, whether it's:
- Reporting a bug
- Discussing the current state of the code
- Submitting a fix
- Proposing new features
- Improving the README and Documentation
- Becoming a maintainer
The following is a set of guidelines for contributing to sedpy. These are mostly guidelines, not rules. Use your best judgment, and feel free to propose changes to this document in a pull request.
Pull requests are the best way to propose changes to the codebase (we use Github Flow). We actively welcome your pull requests:
- Fork the repo and create your branch from
master
. - If you've added code that should be tested, add tests.
- Ensure the test passes.
- Issue that pull request!
Hey, don't feel like contributing in code? Help the project by improving it's documentation. We really admire and love changes in documentation!
In short, when you submit code changes, your submissions are understood to be under the same MIT License that covers the project. Feel free to contact the maintainers if that's a concern.
Report bugs using Github's issues
We use GitHub issues to track public bugs. Report a bug by opening a new issue; it's that easy!
Great Bug Reports tend to have:
- A quick summary and/or background
- Steps to reproduce
- Be specific!
- Give sample code if you can.
- What you expected would happen
- What actually happens
- Notes (possibly including why you think this might be happening, or stuff you tried that didn't work)
People love thorough bug reports. I'm not even kidding.
By contributing, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under its MIT License.
This document was adapted from the open-source contribution guidelines for Facebook's Draft