kiwmi/CONTRIBUTING.adoc

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2019-02-19 10:55:14 +00:00
Contribution Guidelines
=======================
*Note*: contributing implies that your contributions get licensed under the terms of link:LICENSE[LICENSE] (MPL 2.0).
Opening issues
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. Make sure you have a GitHub account.
. Include steps to reproduce, if it is a bug.
. Include information on what version you are using.
Submit changes
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Commit messages should be both _clear_ and _descriptive_. If possible they should start with the _verb_ that describes the change.
Don't be shy to include additional information, like motivation, for that change below the initial line.
Other developers should be able to understand _why_ a change occurred, when looking at it at a later point in time.
Coding Style
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Make sure you adhere to the coding style, or your pull request might not get merged.
. Use blocks even when just putting a single statement
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This makes it easier to add more lines later, and we avoid two other discussions. This also doesn't break when you use a macro that expands to multiple statements.
. When things are related, use an `enum`.
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Should be common sense. Seen too much code without it though.
. Comment `// FALLTHROUGH`, `// EMPTY` and `// NOTREACHED` where applicable
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Explicit is better than implicit.
. Don't test against booleans or `NULL`.
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Use the not operator instead.
. Test against numbers
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Don't abuse that `0` is falsey.
. Put headers in this order
.. `#include "file.h"`
.. Standard lib headers
.. POSIX headers
.. Library headers
.. Own stuff
. Put blocks of headers in alphabetical order
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If not possible comment which header requires the out-of-order one.
. Use clang-format
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This should auto-format the rest: `find . -iname '*.c' -o '*.h' | xargs clang-format -i`.
Why am I this pedantic?
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I hate it when I look at code written by 10 people and I see 15 different coding styles, and got to wrap my head around every single one. I don't really care _what_ is used, but it needs to be consistent.
That said, if anything is unclear or I missed something feel free to open an issue.