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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

I really welcome contributions! Please feel free to fork and issue pull requests when...

  • You have a very nice idea to improve this plugin!
  • You found a bug!
  • You're good at English and can help my bad English!

For IE problems, please refer to IE Support.

Introduction

First of all, thank you in advance for your contribution!

This document will introduce something you should know before making some contributions to perfect-scrollbar. I'll try to explain as easy as possible. If there are something missed or not well-documented, please let me know.

Also, the project is not actively maintained. No maintainer is paid, and most of us are busy on our professional or personal works. Please understand that it may take a while for an issue to be resolved. Uploading a PR would be the fastest way to fix an issue.

Directory structure

Please don't edit files in the dist directory as they should only be updated on releases. You'll find source code in the src directory.

Files concerning CSS is placed in the css directory.

examples directory is for the example sources. If you have any example you want to add with a new feature, please add it in the directory.

docs is for GitHub Pages.

Getting started

First, ensure that you have stable Node.js and npm 5 installed.

After basic installation, follow the steps below.

  1. Fork and clone the repo.
  2. Run npm install to install all dev dependencies.
  3. Run npm test to check if everything's well.

Assuming that you don't see any error, you're ready to go.

Code conventions

Prettier is used for code formatting. Please npm run format before each commit.

Building sources

You can use the npm run build command to build source files into output files.

Submitting pull requests

  1. Create a new branch. Working in your master branch is okay, but not recommended.
  2. Modify the sources.
  3. Run npm test to see if the code fit into the code convention and build without an error. Repeat steps 2-3 until done.
  4. Update the documentation to reflect any changes.
  5. Create examples if needed.
  6. Push to your fork and submit a pull request.

For further information about pull requests, please refer to GitHub's Using Pull Requests.

Code Review

When the pull request is created, anyone can review the source code. After the review is finished and the patch doesn't have any problem, it'll be merged.

Conclusion

The process looks somewhat difficult, but it's necessary to avoid maintanance issues and make the code easy to read and use.

If there is any opinion or question, please feel free to ask me.