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Contributing to ANYWAY

OMG. OMG. OMG. We are really glad you are joining the team! We set up a contributor's guide that explains all about setting up ANYWAY's development environment - prepare to be amazed.

Contributors guide

This page contains information about reporting issues as well as some tips and guidelines useful to experienced open source contributors.

Topics

Issues and Bugs

As one of the teams working in the Public Knowledge Workshop, we put data credibility first. If you find any discrepancies between the presented data and the information in the used open-source databases, please let us know. Also, if you happen to stumble upon a bug, don't hesitate and raise a flag and we will get it fixed. You can send any your reports to anyway@anyway.co.il. Don't forget to mention which operating system and browser you were using, so we can easily track down the issue.

If you are already digging through the code and our website and you happen to find a bug, please go ahead and open a new issue. Just remember to look through the pre-existing ones to make sure there are no duplicates. Even better if you can take it on yourself, then we encourage you to report the issue, assign yourself and submit a Pull Request with a fix.

Issue Report Format:

  • Title **Issue** One-liner regarding the issue you discovered

  • Description Explain why this is a bug, how to reproduce it and on which OS and browser you encounter it. If you can't fix it yourself, try to suggest a fix or any leads you found in the code. Add any errors thrown from a non-minified stack trace, if possible. Attach any screenshots that are relevant.

Once you are done with the basics, don't forget to tag it with bug and 1 - Ready and other relevant tags from the following list: backend, frontend, easy, good-first-issue, news-flash-report

Feature Requests

New feature requests are more than welcome, just don't forget to pass them by the team and also check the issue list to avoid duplicates. We generally submit major changes via direct email to our mail center and request small changes by submitting an issue.

Feature Request Format:

  • Title **Feature** One-liner on the feature you'd like to implement

  • Description Elaborate on the feature, why it is needed and the time frame in which you'd like it to be completed. If you have any suggestions or advice, share it with the team. Also, mockups are very helpful - so you can try to make a simple screenshot to help us understand the concept.

Now tag it with enhancement and 1 - Ready and other relevant tags from the following list: backend, frontend, easy,

Coding Rules

Branch Names

Branch naming convention is as following:

TYPE-ISSUE_ID-DESCRIPTION

examples:
feat-1247-add-vision-zero-widgets
refactor-1242-move-rank-field-to-meta

When TYPE can be:

  • feat - is a new feature
  • doc - documentation only changes
  • cicd - changes related to CI/CD system
  • fix - a bug fix
  • refactor - code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature

All PRs must include commit message with the changes description!

Branching system: master - used for production
dev - anything else

Working Procedure

A standard procedure for working on an issue would be to:

  1. Change to dev branch: git checkout dev and pull changes from upstream git pull upstream dev
  2. Create new branch from dev , like: refactor-1242-move-rank-field-to-meta
  3. Work on your new branch - commit - repeat
  4. Change to dev branch: git checkout dev and git pull at dev: git pull upstream dev
  5. Change to your branch: git checkout dev and merge: git merge your-branch-name and solve conflicts if they exist
  6. Push branch dev to your forked directory using git push origin dev and open PR to data-for-change's dev branch.
  7. Get a code review approval / reject
  8. After approval, merge your PR
  9. Delete your branch after merge

Clean Code

See the following Python and JavaScript format guidelines and stick to them:

Universally formatted code is crucial in open source projects and promotes ease of writing, reading and maintenance.

Logging

Do not use print for messages in Python code! Instead, use the logging module. Remember that log messages are very helpful for debugging server issues, so add as much information as you can.

Tests

See our Tests documentation

Pull Requests

Code review comments may be added to your pull requests, keep an eye out for necessary changes before merge approval. If the maintainer decides that your code is good, it will be merged to ANYWAY's dev repository. On your pull requests, don't forget to add a reference to the issue using the Linked issues section of the Pull Request. Also, shortly summarize the changes made and list any known-issues after the future merge (open new issues for them and add a reference to them as well).

Squash Comment

Before you make a pull request, squash your commits into logical units of work using git rebase -i and git push -f.

Contribution Tips

Remote Volunteering

On regular days, the team meets each Monday evening at Google Campus, Tel Aviv. However, during these days of covid-19 - we're volunteering remotely and meet our teammates once a week via ZOOM. You are more than welcome to join us - email us.

Slack

Our Slack channel is our communication tool and is connected to the relevant git notifications. If you want to join us, Email us and we'll add you to our workspace.

Points of Contacts

  • galraij - Project Entrepreneur and Manager
  • atalyaalon - Head of R&D, BackEnd and DevOps Team Leader
  • assafdayan - Back End Tech Leader
  • yuvalbl - Front End Team Leader
  • inbalbeka - Product Team Leader
  • Mano3 - Algorithms Team Leader
  • Alonr6 and elashahar01 - Data Team Leaders

(contributors: feel free to edit the file, add yourselves to the POC list, and share any tips that you find helpful)