This page lists recommendations and requirements for how to best contribute to ScalaRL. We strive to obey these as best as possible. As always, thanks for contributing - we hope these guidelines make it easier and shed some light on our approach and processes.
master
is the latest, deployed version.develop
is where development happens and all pull requests should be submitted.
Submit pull requests against the develop
branch. Try not to pollute your pull request with unintended changes. Keep it simple and small.
We don't have strong conventions around our tests, but here are a few guidelines that might help.
If you're adding scalacheck properties... hold tight, more coming soon. Here's an example of an example:
package com.scalarl
import org.scalacheck.Prop
class ExampleLaws extends ??? {
// Fill in!
}
We use scalatest for all of our other tests.
The documentation for ScalaRL's website is stored in the docs/src/main/tut
directory of the docs subproject.
ScalaRL's documentation is powered by sbt-microsites and tut. tut
compiles any code that appears in the documentation, ensuring that snippets and examples won't go out of date.
We would love your help making our documentation better. If you see a page that's empty or needs work, please send us a pull request making it better. If you contribute a new data structure to ScalaRL, please add a corresponding documentation page. To do this, you'll need to:
- Add a new Markdown file to
docs/src/main/tut/datatypes
with the following format:
---
layout: docs
title: "<Your Page Title>"
section: "data"
source: "scala-rl-core/src/main/scala/io/samritchie/rl/<YourDataType>.scala"
scaladoc: "#scalarl.<YourDataType>"
---
# Your Data Type
.....
-
Make sure to add some code examples! Any code block of this form will get compiled using
tut
:<your code>
(Please replace toot
with tut
!) tut
will evaluate your code as if you'd pasted it into a REPL and insert each line's results in the output. State persists across tut
code blocks, so feel free to alternate code blocks with text discussion. See the tut README for more information on the various options you can use to customize your code blocks.
- Add your page to the appropriate section in the menu
run sbt docs/makeMicrosite
to generate a local copy of the microsite.
- Install jekyll locally, depending on your platform, you might do this with any of the following commands:
yum install jekyll
apt-get install jekyll
gem install jekyll
- In a shell, navigate to the generated site directory in
docs/target/site
- Start jekyll with
jekyll serve --incremental
- Navigate to http://127.0.0.1:4000/scala-rl/ in your browser
- Make changes to your site, and run
sbt docs/makeMicrosite
to regenerate the site. The changes should be reflected as soon assbt docs/makeMicrosite
completes.
After the release occurs, you will need to update the documentation. Here is a list of the places that will definitely need to be updated:
README.md
: update version numbersCHANGES.md
: summarize changes since last release
(Other changes may be necessary, especially for large releases.)
You can get a list of changes between release tags v0.1.2
and v0.2.0
via git log v0.1.2..v0.2.0
. Scanning this list of commit messages is a good way to get a summary of what happened, although it does not account for conversations that occurred on Github. (You can see the same view on the Github UI by navigating to https://github.com/sritchie/scala-rl/compare/v0.1.2...v0.2.0.)
Once the relevant documentation changes have been committed, new release notes should be added. You can add a release by clicking the "Draft a new release" button on that page, or if the relevant release already exists, you can click "Edit release".
The website should then be updated via sbt docs/publishMicrosite
.
By contributing your code, you agree to license your contribution under the terms of the APLv2.