Anyone can contribute to this project. To contribute, please submit a Pull Request. It is as simple as that. If you have any questions about the project or the submission process please reach out to the project owner.
Prerequisites:
- Familiarity with pull requests and issues.
- Knowledge of Markdown for editing
.md
documents.
In particular, this project seeks the following types of contributions:
- Ideas: participate in an issue thread or start your own to have your voice heard.
- Features: submit a pull request with your code changes for a feature or bug fix.
- Documentation: help us ensure that this documentation is comprehensive and helpful. if there is a topic that is overlooked, please add it, or if the current documentation was outdated or confusing update it to be more helpful.
- Copy editing: fix typos, clarify language, and generally improve the quality of the content.
- Formatting: help keep content easy to read with consistent formatting.
- Run the tests
npm test
- Push!
To ensure consistency throughout the source code, keep these rules in mind as you are working:
- All features or bug fixes must be tested by one or more specs (unit-tests).
- All public API methods must be documented. (Details TBC).
We have very precise rules over how our git commit messages can be formatted. This leads to more readable messages that are easy to follow when looking through the project history. But also, we use the git commit messages to generate the Angular change log.
Each commit message consists of a header, a body and a footer. The header has a special format that includes a type, a scope and a subject:
<type>(<scope>): <subject>
<BLANK LINE>
<body>
<BLANK LINE>
<footer>
The header is mandatory and the scope of the header is optional.
Any line of the commit message cannot be longer 100 characters! This allows the message to be easier to read on GitHub as well as in various git tools.
If the commit reverts a previous commit, it should begin with revert:
, followed by the header of the reverted commit. In the body it should say: This reverts commit <hash>.
, where the hash is the SHA of the commit being reverted.
Must be one of the following:
- feat: A new feature
- fix: A bug fix
- docs: Documentation only changes
- style: Changes that do not affect the meaning of the code (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, etc)
- refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
- perf: A code change that improves performance
- test: Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests
- build: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
- ci: Changes to our CI configuration files and scripts (example scopes: Travis, Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
- chore: Other changes that don't modify
src
ortest
files
The scope could be anything specifying place of the commit change. For example
Compiler
, ElementInjector
, etc.
The subject contains succinct description of the change:
- use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes"
- don't capitalize first letter
- no dot (.) at the end
Just as in the subject, use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes". The body should include the motivation for the change and contrast this with previous behavior.
The footer should contain any information about Breaking Changes and is also the place to reference GitHub issues that this commit Closes.
Breaking Changes should start with the word BREAKING CHANGE:
with a space or two newlines. The rest of the commit message is then used for this.
A detailed explanation can be found in this document.