Contributions are welcome, and they are greatly appreciated! Every little bit helps, and credit will always be given.
If you are reporting a bug, please include:
- Your operating system name and version.
- Any details about your local setup that might be helpful in troubleshooting.
- Detailed steps to reproduce the bug.
Look through the GitHub issues for bugs. Anything tagged with "bug" and "help wanted" is open to whoever wants to implement it.
Look through the GitHub issues for features. Anything tagged with "enhancement" and "help wanted" is open to whoever wants to implement it.
You can never have enough documentation! Please feel free to contribute to any part of the documentation, such as the official docs, docstrings, or even on the web in blog posts, articles, and such.
If you are proposing a feature:
- Explain in detail how it would work.
- Keep the scope as narrow as possible, to make it easier to implement.
- Remember that this is a volunteer-driven project, and that contributions are welcome :)
Ready to contribute? Here's how to set up pywaterflood
for local development.
-
Download a copy of
pywaterflood
locally with git.git clone https://github.com/frank1010111/pywaterflood.git
-
Install python3 and Rust if you haven't already.
-
Install
pywaterflood
in a virtual environment usingmaturin
:python3 -m venv venv source venv/bin/activate # assuming linux, MacOS, or git-bash pip install maturin maturin develop
-
Use
git
to create a branch for local development and make your changes:git checkout -b name-of-your-bugfix-or-feature
-
When you're done making changes, check that your changes conform to any code formatting requirements and pass any tests.
You can run the linting and tests with nox:
pip install nox nox
To make sure linting runs with every commit, use pre-commit hooks:
pip install pre-commit pre-commit install --install-hooks
-
If you've updated the documentation, check that sphinx still builds.
You need to make sure you've installed pandoc, then use nox to build and serve them.
nox -s docs -- --serve
Point your browser to localhost:8000 to see if they look how you expect.
-
Commit your changes and open a pull request.
Before you submit a pull request, check that it meets these guidelines:
- The pull request should include additional tests if appropriate.
- If the pull request adds functionality, the docs should be updated.
- The pull request should work for all currently supported operating systems and versions of Python.
Please note that the pywaterflood
project is released with a
Code of Conduct.
By contributing to this project you agree to abide by its terms.