Thank you for any and all contributions! Following these guidelines will help streamline the process of contributing and make sure that we're all on the same page. While we ask that you read this guide and follow it to the best of your abilities, we welcome contributions from all, regardless of your level of experience.
By participating in this project, you agree to abide by the code of conduct.
Don't feel that you must be a computer whiz to make meaningful contributions. Feel free to:
- Identify areas for future development (open an Issue)
- Identify issues/bugs (open an Issue)
- Write tutorials/vignettes (open a Pull Request to contribute to the ones here, or make your own elsewhere and send us a link)
- Add functionality (open a Pull Request)
- Fix bugs (open a Pull Request)
Getting ready to make your first contribution? Here are a couple of tutorials you may wish to check out:
- Tutorial for first-timers
- How to contribute (in-depth lessons)
- GitHub on setup
- GitHub on pull requests.)
- Fork the repository
- Clone the repository from GitHub to your computer e.g,.
git clone https://github.com/ropensci/weathercan.git
- Make sure to track progress upstream (i.e., on our version of
weathercan
atropensci/weathercan
)git remote add upstream https://github.com/ropensci/weathercan.git
- Before making changes make sure to pull changes in from upstream with
git pull upstream
- Make your changes
- For changes beyond minor typos, add an item to NEWS.md describing the changes and add yourself to the DESCRIPTION file as a contributor
- Push to your GitHub account
- Submit a pull request to home base (main branch) at
ropensci/weathercan
- In general follow the convention of http://r-pkgs.had.co.nz/r.html#style (snake_case functions and argument names, etc.)
- Where there is conflict, default to the style of
weathercan
- Use explicit package imports (i.e. package_name::package_function) and avoid @import if at all possible
In order to actively develop and test weathercan
(i.e. beyond small documentation changes)
you will need to set up your system for R Package development
(R Packages is a great resource here).
- After cloning the repository (above), install R packages devtools and pak.
- If using RStudio, open the weathercan project
- Use pak to install all weathercan dependencies:
pak::local_install()
- Try running tests any time you edit something (in RStudio, this is Ctrl/Cmd-Shift-T)
- You can load all internal functions for interactive testing using Ctrl/Cmd-Shift-L.
If this doesn't work, please try and update this section! The more the better.