We appreciate all kinds of contributions. As a contributor, here are the guidelines we would like you to follow:
- Issues and Bugs
- Feature Requests
- Submission Guidelines
- Coding Rules
- Commit Message Guidelines
- Packages
If you find a bug in the source code or a mistake in the documentation, you can help us by submitting an issue to our GitHub Repository. Including an issue reproduction (via StackBlitz, JsBin, Plunkr, etc.) is the absolute best way to help the team quickly diagnose the problem. Screenshots are also helpful.
You can help the team even more and submit a Pull Request with a fix.
You can request a new feature by submitting an issue to our GitHub Repository. If you would like to implement a new feature, please submit an issue with a proposal for your work first, to be sure that we can use it. Please consider what kind of change it is:
- For a Major Feature, first open an issue and outline your proposal so that it can be discussed. This will also allow us to better coordinate our efforts, prevent duplication of work, and help you to craft the change so that it is successfully accepted into the project.
- Small Features can be crafted and directly submitted as a Pull Request.
If your issue appears to be a bug, and hasn't been reported, open a new issue. Providing the following information will increase the chances of your issue being dealt with quickly:
- Overview of the Issue - if an error is being thrown a non-minified stack trace helps
- @sbb-esta/lyne-elements Version - which version is affected
- Motivation for or Use Case - explain what are you trying to do and why the current behavior is a bug for you
- Browsers and Operating System - is this a problem with all browsers?
- Reproduce the Error - provide a live example (using StackBlitz or similar) or an unambiguous set of steps
- Screenshots - Due to the visual nature of @sbb-esta/lyne-elements, screenshots can help the team triage issues far more quickly than a text description.
- Related Issues - has a similar issue been reported before?
- Suggest a Fix - if you can't fix the bug yourself, perhaps you can point to what might be causing the problem (line of code or commit)
You can file new issues by providing the above information here.
-
Search GitHub for an open or closed PR that relates to your submission. You don't want to duplicate effort.
-
Make your changes in a new git branch:
git checkout -b my-fix-branch main
-
Create your patch, including appropriate test cases.
-
Follow our Coding Rules.
-
Test your changes with our supported browsers and screen readers.
-
Run tests via
yarn test
and ensure that all tests pass. -
Commit your changes using a descriptive commit message that follows our commit message conventions. Adherence to these conventions is necessary because release notes are automatically generated from these messages.
git commit -a
Note: the optional commit
-a
command line option will automatically "add" and "rm" edited files. -
Push your branch to GitHub:
git push my-fork my-fix-branch
-
In GitHub, send a pull request to
lyne-components:main
. The PR title and message should as well conform to the commit message conventions. -
If we suggest changes then:
-
Make the required updates.
-
Re-run tests to ensure tests are still passing.
-
Rebase your branch and force push to your GitHub repository (this will update your Pull Request):
git rebase upstream/main -i git push -f
-
That's it! Thank you for your contribution!
To ensure consistency throughout the source code, keep these rules in mind as you are working:
- All features or bug fixes must be tested by one or more specs (unit-tests).
- All public API methods must be documented.
- We use prettier and eslint rules to enforce code style.
- Also see CODING_STANDARDS.
- Check Review docs to know what is going to be reviewed.
This project uses Conventional Commits to generate the changelog.
<type>(<optional scope>): <subject>
<BLANK LINE>
<body>
<BLANK LINE>
<footer>
Any line of the commit message cannot be longer 100 characters! This allows the message to be easier to read on GitHub as well as in various git tools.
Must be one of the following:
- feat: A new feature
- fix: A bug fix
- docs: Documentation only changes
- style: Changes that do not affect the meaning of the code (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, etc)
- refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
- perf: A code change that improves performance
- test: Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests
- build: Changes that affect the build system, CI configuration or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
- chore: Other changes that don't modify
src
ortest
files
The scope could be anything specifying place of the commit change. For example
button
, alert
, etc.
The subject contains succinct description of the change:
- use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes"
- don't capitalize first letter
- no dot (.) at the end
Just as in the subject, use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes". The body should include the motivation for the change and contrast this with previous behavior.
The footer should contain any information about Breaking Changes and is also the place to reference GitHub issues that this commit Closes.
Breaking Changes should start with the word BREAKING CHANGE:
with a space or two newlines.
The rest of the commit message is then used for this.
This project publishes the following package:
- @sbb-esta/lyne-elements
- @sbb-esta/lyne-elements-experimental
- @sbb-esta/lyne-react
- @sbb-esta/lyne-react-experimental
This project uses SASS for styling the components.
We recommend using US English in all docs or examples.