Hey there! We are really excited that you are interested in contributing. This is a general contribution guide for most of my projects. Before submitting your contribution, please make sure to take a moment and read through the following guide:
We use pnpm
for most of the projects, and maybe a few with yarn
, we highly recommend you install ni
so you don't need to worry about the package manager when switching across different projects.
We will use ni
's commands in the following code snippets. If you are not using it, you can do the conversion yourself: ni = pnpm install
, nr = pnpm run
.
To set the repository up:
Step | Command |
---|---|
1. Install Node.js, using the latest LTS | - |
2. Enable Corepack | corepack enable |
3. Install @antfu/ni |
npm i -g @antfu/ni |
4. Install dependencies under the project root | ni |
Start the development environment.
If it's a Node.js package, it will start the build process in watch mode.
If it's a frontend project, it usually starts the dev server. You can then develop and see the changes in real time.
If it's a Node.js package, it starts a dev server for the playground. The code is usually under playground/
.
Build the project for production. The result is usually under dist/
.
We use ESLint and Prettier for linting and formatting. It also lints for JSON, YAML and Markdown files if exists.
You can run nr lint --fix
to let ESLint formats and lints the code.
Learn more about the ESLint Setup.
Run the tests. We mostly using Vitest - a replacement of Jest.
You can filter the tests to be run by nr test [match]
, for example, nr test foo
will only run test files that contain foo
.
Config options are often under the test
field of vitest.config.ts
or vite.config.ts
.
Vitest runs in watch mode by default, so you can modify the code and see the test result automatically, which is great for test-driven development. To run the test only once, you can do nr test --run
.
For some projects, we might have multiple types of tests set up. For example nr test:unit
for unit tests, nr test:e2e
for end-to-end tests. nr test
commonly run them together, you can run them separately as needed.
For more, you can run bare nr
, which will prompt a list of all available scripts.
Before you start to work on a feature pull request, it's always better to open a feature request issue first to discuss with the maintainers whether the feature is desired and the design of those features. This would help save time for both the maintainers and the contributors and help features to be shipped faster.
For typo fixes, it's recommended to batch multiple typo fixes into one pull request to maintain a cleaner commit history.
We use Conventional Commits for commit messages, which allows the changelog to be auto-generated based on the commits. Please read the guide through if you aren't familiar with it already.
Only fix:
and feat:
will be presented in the changelog.
Note that fix:
and feat:
are for actual code changes (that might affect logic).
For typo or document changes, use docs:
or chore:
instead:
->fix: typo
docs: fix typo
If you don't know how to send a Pull Request, we recommend reading the guide.
When sending a pull request, make sure your PR's title also follows the Commit Convention.
If your PR fixes or resolves an existing issue, please add the following line in your PR description (replace 123
with a real issue number):
fix #123
This will let GitHub know the issues are linked, and automatically close them once the PR gets merged. Learn more at the guide.
It's ok to have multiple commits in a single PR, you don't need to rebase or force push for your changes as we will use Squash and Merge
to squash the commits into one commit when merging.
To enable it, run
corepack enable
You only need to do it once after Node.js is installed.
Corepack makes sure you are using the correct version for package manager when you run corresponding commands. Projects might have Under projects with configuration as shown on the right, corepack will install |
{
"packageManager": "[email protected]"
} |
We use ESLint and Prettier for linting and formatting with @sxzz/eslint-config
.
We recommend using VS Code along with the ESLint extension. With the settings on the right, you can have auto fix and formatting when you save the code you are editing. | VS Code's {
"editor.codeActionsOnSave": {
"source.fixAll": false,
"source.fixAll.eslint": true
}
} |