2.2 KiB
How to contribute
I'm really glad you're reading this, if you are willing to contribute to this project in some form. This is a quite small project with relatively low complexity so conventions are not as strict as they might be elsewhere. I am keen to learn whether and how this thing was useful to you, where you had problems and what you think could be improved.
Here are some important resources:
- This Blogpost tells you about intention and scope for this tool (in German).
- For questions and suggestions, you can E-Mail me directly.
- Bugs? Gitlab is where to report them.
Submitting changes
Please send a Pull Request to radiation_tagger in the develop branch with a clear list of what you've done (read more about pull requests). Please follow our coding conventions (below) and make sure all of your commits are atomic (one feature per commit). Keep in mind that I am a bloody beginner and probably make more mistakes than you, so I am always open for improvements.
Always write a clear log message for your commits. One-line messages are fine for small changes, but bigger changes should look like this:
$ git commit -m "A brief summary of the commit
>
> A paragraph describing what changed and its impact."
Coding conventions
Start reading the code and you'll get the hang of it. We optimize for readability:
- We indent using 4 spaces (soft tabs).
- We use "describing" variables with underscores like 'position_list'.
- Classes and functions go to functions.py to keep the main program small and easy to understand.
- We generally follow the Python 3 coding style guidelines.
- This is open source software. Consider the people who will read your code, and make it look nice for them. It's sort of like driving a car: Perhaps you love doing donuts when you're alone, but with passengers the goal is to make the ride as smooth as possible.
Thanks, Commander1024