There are many ways you can help contribute to symposion and the various apps, themes, and starter projects that it is made up of. Contributing code, writing documentation, reporting bugs, as well as reading and providing feedback on issues and pull requests, all are valid and necessary ways to help.
The great thing about using a distributed versioning control system like git is that everyone becomes a committer. When other people write good patches it makes it very easy to include their fixes/features and give them proper credit for the work.
We recommend that you do all your work in a separate branch. When you are ready to work on a bug or a new feature create yourself a new branch. The reason why this is important is you can commit as often you like. When you are ready you can merge in the change. Let's take a look at a common workflow:
git checkout -b task-566
... fix and git commit often ...
git push origin task-566
The reason we have created two new branches is to stay off of master
.
Keeping master clean of only upstream changes makes yours and ours lives
easier. You can then send us a pull request for the fix/feature. Then we can
easily review it and merge it when ready.
Writing a good commit message makes it simple for us to identify what your commit does from a high-level. There are some basic guidelines we'd like to ask you to follow.
A critical part is that you keep the first line as short and sweet as possible. This line is important because when git shows commits and it has limited space or a different formatting option is used the first line becomes all someone might see. If your change isn't something non-trivial or there reasoning behind the change is not obvious, then please write up an extended message explaining the fix, your rationale, and anything else relevant for someone else that might be reviewing the change. Lastly, if there is a corresponding issue in Github issues for it, use the final line to provide a message that will link the commit message to the issue and auto-close it if appropriate.
Add ability to travel back in time
You need to be driving 88 miles per hour to generate 1.21 gigawatts of
power to properly use this feature.
Fixes #88
When writing code to be included in symposion keep our style in mind:
- Follow PEP8 there are some cases where we do not follow PEP8. It is an excellent starting point.
- Follow Django's coding style we're pretty much in agreement on Django style outlined there.
We would like to enforce a few more strict guides not outlined by PEP8 or Django's coding style:
- PEP8 tries to keep line length at 80 characters. We follow it when we can, but not when it makes a line harder to read. It is okay to go a little bit over 80 characters if not breaking the line improves readability.
- Use double quotes not single quotes. Single quotes are allowed in cases where a double quote is needed in the string. This makes the code read cleaner in those cases.
- Blank lines are indented to the appropriate level for the block they are in.
- Docstrings always use three double quotes on a line of their own, so, for example, a single line docstring should take up three lines not one.
- Imports are grouped specifically and ordered alphabetically. This is shown in the example below.
- Always use
reverse
and never@models.permalink
. - Tuples should be reserved for positional data structures and not used where a list is more appropriate.
- URL patterns should use the
url()
function rather than a tuple.
Here is an example of these rules applied:
# first set of imports are stdlib imports
# non-from imports go first then from style import in their own group
import csv
# second set of imports are Django imports with contrib in their own
# group.
from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse
from django.db import models
from django.utils import timezone
from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
from django.contrib.auth.models import User
# third set of imports are external apps (if applicable)
from tagging.fields import TagField
# fourth set of imports are local apps
from .fields import MarkupField
class Task(models.Model):
"""
A model for storing a task.
"""
creator = models.ForeignKey(User)
created = models.DateTimeField(default=timezone.now)
modified = models.DateTimeField(default=timezone.now)
objects = models.Manager()
class Meta:
verbose_name = _("task")
verbose_name_plural = _("tasks")
def __unicode__(self):
return self.summary
def save(self, **kwargs):
self.modified = datetime.now()
super(Task, self).save(**kwargs)
def get_absolute_url(self):
return reverse("task_detail", kwargs={"task_id": self.pk})
# custom methods
class TaskComment(models.Model):
# ... you get the point ...
pass
Please keep your pull requests focused on one specific thing only. If you have a number of contributions to make, then please send seperate pull requests. It is much easier on maintainers to receive small, well defined, pull requests, than it is to have a single large one that batches up a lot of unrelated commits.
If you ended up making multiple commits for one logical change, please rebase into a single commit.
git rebase -i HEAD~10 # where 10 is the number of commits back you need
This will pop up an editor with your commits and some instructions you want to squash commits down by replacing 'pick' with 's' to have it combined with the commit before it. You can squash multiple ones at the same time.
When you save and exit the text editor where you were squashing commits, git will squash them down and then present you with another editor with commit messages. Choose the one to apply to the squashed commit (or write a new one entirely.) Save and exit will complete the rebase. Use a forced push to your fork.
git push -f