Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is done:
- Fork the repository and create your branch from
main
. - Follow the main installation steps.
- Make your changes.
- Make sure that the code passes linter and type checks (
yarn lint
andyarn prettier:check
). - Make sure the code passes unit and end to end tests (
yarn test
). - Profit!
See how a minor change to your commit message style can make you a better programmer.
Format: <type>(<scope>): <subject>
<scope>
is optional
feat: add hat wobble
^--^ ^------------^
| |
| +-> Summary in present tense.
|
+-------> Type: chore, docs, feat, fix, refactor, style, or test.
More Examples:
feat
: (new feature for the user, not a new feature for build script)fix
: (bug fix for the user, not a fix to a build script)docs
: (changes to the documentation)style
: (formatting, missing semi colons, etc; no production code change)refactor
: (refactoring production code, eg. renaming a variable)test
: (adding missing tests, refactoring tests; no production code change)chore
: (updating grunt tasks etc; no production code change)
References:
- https://www.conventionalcommits.org/
- https://seesparkbox.com/foundry/semantic_commit_messages
- http://karma-runner.github.io/1.0/dev/git-commit-msg.html
Depending on the purpose every git branch should be prefixed.
feature/
when adding a new feature to the applicationbugfix/
when fixing an existing bugrefactor/
for refactordocs/
for docs
No specific rules at this point in time (this may change in the future though), use common sense and well known good practices.
- Keep your commit message short.
- Your message should describe clearly the change.
- You may use a prefix / scope to label the change.
Following the Conventional Commits specification is not mandatory but if you do it will be appreciated.