First off, thanks for taking the time to contribute!
The following is a set of guidelines for contributing to Strawberry on GitHub. These are mostly guidelines, not rules. Use your best judgment, and feel free to propose changes to this document in a pull request.
This section guides you through submitting a bug report for Strawberry. Following these guidelines helps maintainers and the community understand your report, reproduce the behavior, and find related reports.
Before creating bug reports, please check this list to be sure that you need to create one. When you are creating a bug report, please include as many details as possible. Make sure you include the Python and Strawberry versions.
Note: If you find a Closed issue that seems like it is the same thing that you're experiencing, open a new issue and include a link to the original issue in the body of your new one.
- Check that your issue does not already exist in the issue tracker.
Bugs are tracked on the official issue tracker where you can create a new one.
Explain the problem and include additional details to help maintainers reproduce the problem:
- Use a clear and descriptive title for the issue to identify the problem.
- Describe the exact steps which reproduce the problem in as many details as possible.
- Provide specific examples to demonstrate the steps to reproduce the issue. Include links to files or GitHub projects, or copy-paste-able snippets, which you use in those examples.
- Describe the behavior you observed after following the steps and point out what exactly is the problem with that behavior.
- Explain which behavior you expected to see instead and why.
Provide more context by answering these questions:
- Did the problem start happening recently (e.g. after updating to a new version of Strawberry) or was this always a problem?
- If the problem started happening recently, can you reproduce the problem in an older version of Strawberry? What's the most recent version in which the problem doesn't happen?
- Can you reliably reproduce the issue? If not, provide details about how often the problem happens and under which conditions it normally happens.
Include details about your configuration and environment:
- Which version of Strawberry are you using?
- Which Python version Strawberry has been installed for?
- What's the name and version of the OS you're using?
This section guides you through submitting an enhancement suggestion for Strawberry, including completely new features and minor improvements to existing functionality. Following these guidelines helps maintainers and the community understand your suggestion and find related suggestions.
Before creating enhancement suggestions, please check this list as you might find out that you don't need to create one. When you are creating an enhancement suggestion, please include as many details as possible.
- Check that your issue does not already exist in the issue tracker.
Enhancement suggestions are tracked on the official issue tracker where you can create a new one and provide the following information:
- Use a clear and descriptive title for the issue to identify the suggestion.
- Provide a step-by-step description of the suggested enhancement in as many details as possible.
- Provide specific examples to demonstrate the steps.
- Describe the current behavior and explain which behavior you expected to see instead and why.
You will need Poetry to start contributing to Strawberry. Refer to the documentation to start using Poetry.
You will first need to clone the repository using git
and place yourself in
its directory:
$ git clone [email protected]:strawberry-graphql/strawberry.git
$ cd strawberry
Now, you will need to install the required dependencies for Strawberry and be sure that the current tests are passing on your machine:
$ poetry install
$ poetry run pytest tests
Strawberry uses the black coding style and you must ensure that your code follows it. If not, the CI will fail and your Pull Request will not be merged.
To make sure that you don't accidentally commit code that does not follow the coding style, you can install a pre-commit hook that will check that everything is in order:
$ poetry run pre-commit install
Your code must always be accompanied by corresponding tests. If tests are not present, your code will not be merged.
- Be sure that your pull request contains tests that cover the changed or added code.
- If your changes warrant a documentation change, the pull request must also update the documentation.