Contributor Guide

Thank you for your interest in improving the Hypermodern Python Cookiecutter. This project is open-source under the MIT license and welcomes contributions in the form of bug reports, feature requests, and pull requests.

Here is a list of important resources for contributors:

How to report a bug

Report bugs on the Issue Tracker.

When filing an issue, make sure to answer these questions:

  • Which operating system and Python version are you using?

  • Which version of this project are you using?

  • What did you do?

  • What did you expect to see?

  • What did you see instead?

The best way to get your bug fixed is to provide a test case, and/or steps to reproduce the issue.

How to request a feature

Request features on the Issue Tracker.

How to set up your development environment

You need Python 3.7+ and the following tools:

Fork the repository on GitHub, and clone the fork to your local machine. You can now generate a project from your development version:

$ cookiecutter path/to/cookiecutter-hypermodern-python

You may also want to push your generated project to GitHub, and set up continuous integration.

How to test the project

Please refer to the User Guide for instructions on how to run the test suite locally.

How to submit changes

Open a pull request to submit changes to this project.

Your pull request needs to meet the following guidelines for acceptance:

  • The Nox test suite must pass without errors and warnings.

  • Include unit tests. This project maintains 100% code coverage.

  • If your changes add functionality, update the documentation accordingly.

Feel free to submit early, though—we can always iterate on this.

It is recommended to open an issue before starting work on anything. This will allow a chance to talk it over with the owners and validate your approach.

How to accept changes

You need to be a project maintainer to accept changes.

Before accepting a pull request, go through the following checklist:

  • The PR must pass all checks.

  • The PR must have a descriptive title.

  • The PR should be labelled with the kind of change (see below).

Release notes are pre-filled with titles and authors of merged pull requests. Labels group the pull requests into sections. The following list shows the available sections, with associated labels in parentheses:

  • 💥 Breaking Changes (breaking)

  • 🚀 Features (enhancement)

  • 🔥 Removals and Deprecations (removal)

  • 🐞 Fixes (bug)

  • 🐎 Performance (performance)

  • 🚨 Testing (testing)

  • 👷 Continuous Integration (ci)

  • 📚 Documentation (documentation)

  • 🔨 Refactoring (refactoring)

  • 💄 Style (style)

  • 📦 Dependencies (dependencies)

To merge the pull request, follow these steps:

  1. Click Squash and Merge. (Select this option from the dropdown menu of the merge button, if it is not shown.)

  2. Click Confirm squash and merge.

  3. Click Delete branch.

How to make a release

You need to be a project maintainer to make a release.

Before making a release, go through the following checklist:

  • All pull requests for the release have been merged.

  • The default branch passes all checks.

Releases are made by publishing a GitHub Release. A draft release is being maintained based on merged pull requests. To publish the release, follow these steps:

  1. Click Edit next to the draft release.

  2. Enter a tag with the new version.

  3. Enter the release title, also the new version.

  4. Edit the release description, if required.

  5. Click Publish Release.

Version numbers adhere to Calendar Versioning, of the form YYYY.MM.DD.

After publishing the release, the following automated steps are triggered:

  • The Git tag is applied to the repository.

  • Read the Docs builds a new stable version of the documentation.