General HydePHP Contribution Guide
Abstract
This is the general contribution guide for the HydePHP organization. Please note that our repositories may have their own contribution guide policies, which supersede this one.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome and will be fully credited.
Please read and understand the contribution guide before creating an issue or pull request. This document is a living standard that may be updated when needed.
Resources
If you're new to HydePHP and are looking to contribute, it may be helpful to learn how the ecosystem and core development works. It's thus highly advised you visit our Developer Resources to learn how HydePHP is structured.
Etiquette
This project is open source, and as such, the maintainers give their free time to build and maintain the source code held within. They make the code freely available in the hope that it will be of use to other developers. It would be extremely unfair for them to suffer abuse or anger for their hard work.
Please be considerate towards maintainers when raising issues or presenting pull requests. Let's show the world that developers are civilized and selfless people.
It's the duty of the maintainer to ensure that all submissions to the project are of sufficient quality to benefit the project. Many developers have different skill sets, strengths, and weaknesses. Respect the maintainer's decision, and do not be upset or abusive if your submission is not used.
Viability
When requesting or submitting new features, first consider whether they might be useful to others. Open source projects are used by many developers, who may have entirely different needs from your own. Think about whether or not your feature is likely to be used by other users of the project, or if your feature may instead be better suited as a third party extension.
You may also want to make sure that your feature abides by the goals of HydePHP which are as follows:
- Developer experience first: Creating sites with Hyde and contributing to the framework should be a joy.
- Zero config setup: You should be able to just install Hyde and start building your project right away. Hyde should follow convention over configuration and come preconfigured with sensible defaults.
- Customizable when you need it: While configuration should not be a requirement, the option should always be there. As such, we should provide easy ways for customization to those who need it.
When thinking about a new feature, make sure it's intuitive and easy to understand without having to refer to the docs all the time. The most intuitive workflow is often the best one. If a feature requires much explanation to be used and understood, it might need to be simplified.
Procedure
Before filing an issue:
- Attempt to replicate the problem, to ensure that it wasn't a coincidental incident.
- Check to make sure your feature suggestion isn't already present within the project.
- Check the pull requests tab to ensure that the bug doesn't have a fix in progress.
- Check the pull requests tab to ensure that the feature isn't already in progress.
Before submitting a pull request:
- Check the codebase to ensure that your feature doesn't already exist.
- Check the pull requests to ensure that another person hasn't already submitted the feature or fix.
- Check the feature is a viable for the project (see above)
Requirements
If the project maintainer has any additional requirements, you will find them listed here.
We try to follow the Laravel standards, https://laravel.com/docs/10.x/contributions#coding-style
Please add tests!
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Add tests! - Your patch might not be accepted if it doesn't have tests. When submitting a bug fix, make sure to include one or more tests proving the fix works, When adding features, make sure all aspects are properly tested.
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Document any change in behaviour - Make sure the
README.md
and the project documentation are kept up-to-date. -
Consider our release cycle - We try to follow SemVer v2.0.0. Randomly breaking public APIs is not an option.
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One pull request per feature - If you want to do more than one thing, send multiple pull requests. This makes it easier to keep track of changes.
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Send coherent history - Make sure each individual commit in your pull request is meaningful. If you had to make multiple intermediate commits while developing, please squash them before submitting. Making atomic commits eases the burden on the developer reviewing your pull request.
Happy coding!