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OpenCode is a month long open source program organised by GeekHaven IIIT Allahabad. OpenCode attracts talent from all over the world. People contribute to various open source projects. We welcome everyone to experience the awesome event and win exciting prizes.
- GitHub Account
- Git
- Download and install the latest version of Git.
- Set your username in Git.
- Set your commit email address in Git.
To add a mentor open mentors.json
and please maintain the following format EXACTLY (replacing values where indicated):
{
"name" : "Mentors Name",
"imageurl" : "mentor/image.jpg",
"about" : "Hello I'm a web developer",
"facebook" : "url",
"github" : "url",
"twitter" : "url"
}
IMPORTANT:
- All images must be optimized before uploaded to the repo via commit or PR.
- The images should be of square resolution.
- If you do not want to include social media accounts, leave the field empty
"facebook":""
.
To add yourself to student section you need to open the file participants.json
and please maintain the following format EXACTLY (replacing values where indicated):
{
"name" : "Name",
"imageurl" : "contestant/avatar.jpg",
"about" : "Hello I'm a web developer",
"college" : "My college",
"facebook" : "url",
"github" : "url",
"twitter" : "url",
"referral" : "who refered you?"
}
IMPORTANT:
-
All images must be optimized before uploaded to the repo via commit or PR.
-
The images should be of square resolution.
-
If you do not want to include social media accounts, leave the field empty
"facebook":""
. -
While working with JSON, check the file using JSON Lint before opening pull request
We will follow the official GitHub documentation for setting up the repo.
-
Forking and cloning the repository
By forking a repository you create your own copy of the project and make your changes there. Cloning a project means that you are setting up the project on your local system.
-
Syncing a fork
We keep our fork in sync to the original repository so that our copy of the project has the latest changes from the original project.
-
Making changes to project and committing a change
Committing means making changes to the project and adding your changes to the GitHub.
-
Making a pull request
- Pull request means submitting your changes to the original project for the review. Once the maintainers of the project feel that your changes are appropriate then your pull request will be merged.
- Add relevant commit message in the pr, mention issue number and live link to comment while making pr.
- Note: In case you feel any issue during setting up the project or using git, don't hesitate to ask us on our slack channel. We will help you out.
Please help us follow the best practice to make it easy for the reviewer as well as the contributor. We want to focus on the code quality more than on managing pull request ethics.
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People before code: If any of the following rules are violated, the pull-requests must not be rejected. This is to create an easy and joyful onboarding process for new programmers and first-time contributors.
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Single commit per pull request and name the commit as something meaningful, example: Adding <-your-name-> in students/mentors section.
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Reference the issue numbers in the commit message if it resolves an open issue. Follow the pattern Fixes #
-
Provide the link to live gh-pages from your forked repository or relevant screenshot for easier review.
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Pull Request older than 3 days with no response from the contributor shall be marked closed.
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Do not make PR which is not related to any issues. You can create an issue and solve it once we approve them.
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Avoid duplicate PRs, if need be comment on the older PR with the PR number of the follow-up (new PR) and close the obsolete PR yourself.
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Be polite: Be polite to other community members.
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Communicate: Whether you are working on a new feature or facing a doubt please feel free to ask us on our slack channel. We will be happy to help you out.