CONTRIBUTING.md

Contributing to dartR

First of all, thanks for considering contributing to dartR! πŸ‘ It's people like you that make it rewarding for us - the project maintainers - to work on dartR. 😊

dartR is an open source project, maintained by people who care.

Code of conduct

Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.

How you can contribute

There are several ways you can contribute to this project. If you want to know more about why and how to contribute to open source projects like this one, see this Open Source Guide.

We have prepared a document describing how independent developers can contribute to dartR. This document explains the structure of the functions in dartR, programming style, the data structure of the genlight object used in dartR, workflow and many other topics.

Share the love ❀️

Think dartR is useful? Let others discover it, by telling them in person, via Twitter or a blog post.

If you use dartR in your research, please support us by citing dartR. You can find the citation information by typing in the R console:

{r}I citation("dartR”)

Ask a question ⁉️

Using dartR and got stuck? Browse the documentation to see if you can find a solution. Still stuck? Post your question in our Google groups forum and we'll try to do our best to address it.

Want to ask a question in private? Contact the package maintainer by email[mailto:email].

Propose an idea πŸ’‘

Have an idea for a new dartR feature? Take a look at the documentation and issue list to see if it isn't included or suggested yet. If not, suggest your idea as an issue on GitHub. While we can't promise to implement your idea, it helps to:

See below if you want to contribute code for your idea as well.

Report a bug πŸ›

Using dartR and discovered a bug? That's annoying! Don't let others have the same experience and report it as an issue on GitHub so we can fix it. A good bug report makes it easier for us to do so, so please include:

Improve the documentation πŸ“–

Noticed a typo on the website? Think a function could use a better example? Good documentation makes all the difference, so your help to improve it is very welcome!

The website

This website is generated with pkgdown. That means we don't have to write any html: content is pulled together from documentation in the code, vignettes, Markdown files, the package DESCRIPTION and _pkgdown.yml settings. If you know your way around pkgdown, you can propose a file change to improve documentation. If not, report an issue and we can point you in the right direction.

Function documentation

Functions are described as comments near their code and translated to documentation using roxygen2. If you want to improve a function description:

  1. Go to R/ directory in the code repository.
  2. Look for the file with the name of the function.
  3. Propose a file change to update the function documentation in the roxygen comments (starting with #').

Contribute code πŸ“

Care to fix bugs or implement new functionality for dartR? Awesome! πŸ‘ Have a look at the issue list and leave a comment on the things you want to work on. See also the development guidelines below.

Development guidelines

We try to follow the GitHub flow for development.

  1. Fork this repo and clone it to your computer. To learn more about this process, see this guide.
  2. If you have forked and cloned the project before and it has been a while since you worked on it, pull changes from the original repo to your clone by using git pull upstream master.
  3. Open the RStudio project file (.Rproj).
  4. Make your changes:
    • Write your code.
    • Test your code (bonus points for adding unit tests).
    • Document your code (see function documentation above).
    • Check your code with devtools::check() and aim for 0 errors and warnings.
  5. Commit and push your changes.
  6. Submit a pull request.


green-striped-gecko/dartR documentation built on Jan. 31, 2024, 10:14 a.m.