Welcome to TheAlgorithms/C-Plus-Plus! Before submitting pull requests, please make sure that you have read the whole guidelines. If you have any doubts about this contribution guide, please open an issue or ask in our Discord server, and clearly state your concerns.
Please check the reviewer code file for maintainers and reviewers.
Being a contributor at The Algorithms, we request you to follow the points mentioned below:
- You did your own work.
- No plagiarism allowed. Any plagiarized work will not be merged.
- Your work will be distributed under the MIT License once your pull request has been merged.
- Please follow the repository guidelines and standards mentioned below.
New implementation New implementations are welcome!
You can add new algorithms or data structures which are not present in the repository or that can improve the old implementations (documentation, improving test cases, removing bugs or in any other resonable sense)
Issues Please avoid opening issues asking to be "assigned” to a particular algorithm. This merely creates unnecessary noise for maintainers. Instead, please submit your implementation in a pull request, and it will be evaluated by project maintainers.
- Please use the directory structure of the repository.
- Make sure the file extensions should be
*.hpp
,*.h
or*.cpp
. - Don't use
bits/stdc++.h
because this is quite Linux-specific and slows down the compilation process. - Organize your code using
struct
,class
, and/ornamespace
keywords - If an implementation of the algorithm already exists, please refer to the file-name section below.
- You can suggest reasonable changes to existing algorithms.
- Strictly use snake_case (underscore_separated) in filenames.
- If you have added or modified code, please make sure the code compiles before submitting.
- Our automated testing runs CMake on all the pull requests, so please be sure that your code passes before submitting.
- Please conform to Doxygen standard and document the code as much as possible. This not only facilitates the readers but also generates the correct info on the website.
- Be consistent in the use of these guidelines.
- Make sure you put useful comments in your code. Do not comment on obvious things.
- Please avoid creating new directories if at all possible. Try to fit your work into the existing directory structure. If you want to create a new directory, then please check if a similar category has been recently suggested or created by other pull requests.
- If you have modified/added documentation, please ensure that your language is concise and must not contain grammatical errors.
- Do not update
README.md
along with other changes. First, create an issue and then link to that issue in your pull request to suggest specific changes required toREADME.md
. - The repository follows Doxygen standards and auto-generates the repository website. Please ensure the code is documented in this structure. A sample implementation is given below.
- Make sure to add examples and test cases in your
main()
function. - If you find an algorithm or document without tests, please feel free to create a pull request or issue describing suggested changes.
- Please try to add one or more
test()
functions that will invoke the algorithm implementation on random test data with the expected output. Use theassert()
function to confirm that the tests will pass. Requires including thecassert
library.
/**
* @file
* @brief Add one line description here
* @details
* This is a multi-line
* description containing links, references,
* math equations, etc.
* @author [Name](https://github.com/handle)
* @see related_file.cpp, another_file.cpp
*/
#include <cassert> /// for assert
#include /// for `some function here`
/**
* @namespace <check from other files in this repo>
*/
namespace name {
/**
* @brief Class documentation
*/
class class_name {
private:
int variable; ///< short info of this variable
char *message; ///< short info
public:
// other members also documented as below
}
/**
* @brief Function documentation
* @tparam T this is a one-line info about T
* @param param1 on-line info about param1
* @param param2 on-line info about param2
* @returns `true` if ...
* @returns `false` if ...
*/
template<class T>
bool func(int param1, T param2) {
// function statements here
if (/*something bad*/) {
return false;
}
return true;
}
} // namespace name
/**
* @brief Self-test implementations
* @returns void
*/
static void test() {
/* descriptions of the following test */
assert(func(...) == ...); // this ensures that the algorithm works as expected
// can have multiple checks
}
/**
* @brief Main function
* @param argc commandline argument count (ignored)
* @param argv commandline array of arguments (ignored)
* @returns 0 on exit
*/
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
test(); // run self-test implementations
// code here
return 0;
}
- Use lowercase words with
"_"
as a separator - For instance
MyNewCppClass.CPP is incorrect
my_new_cpp_class.cpp is correct format
- It will be used to dynamically create a directory of files and implementation.
- File name validation will run on Docker to ensure validity.
- If an implementation of the algorithm already exists and your version is different from that implemented, please use incremental numeric digit as a suffix. For example: if
median_search.cpp
already exists in thesearch
folder, and you are contributing a new implementation, the filename should bemedian_search2.cpp
and for a third implementation,median_search3.cpp
.
- We recommend adding files to existing directories as much as possible.
- Use lowercase words with
"_"
as separator ( no spaces or"-"
allowed ) - For instance
SomeNew Fancy-Category is incorrect
some_new_fancy_category is correct
- Filepaths will be used to dynamically create a directory of our algorithms.
- Filepath validation will run on GitHub Actions to ensure compliance.
- It is recommended to keep your changes grouped logically within individual commits. Maintainers find it easier to understand changes that are logically spilled across multiple commits. Try to modify just one or two files in the same directory. Pull requests that span multiple directories are often rejected.
git add file_xyz.cpp
git commit -m "your message"
Examples of commit messages with semantic prefixes:
fix: xyz algorithm bug
feat: add xyx algorithm, class xyz
test: add test for xyz algorithm
docs: add comments and explanation to xyz algorithm
Common prefixes:
- fix: A bug fix
- feat: A new feature
- docs: Documentation changes
- test: Correct existing tests or add new ones
- Checkout our pull request template
Before submitting a pull request, build the code locally or using the convenient service.
cmake -B build -S .
We use clang-tidy
as a static code analyzer with a configuration in .clang-tidy
.
clang-tidy --fix --quiet -p build subfolder/file_to_check.cpp --
__clang-format__
is used for code forrmating.
- Installation (only needs to be installed once.)
- Mac (using home-brew):
brew install clang-format
- Mac (using macports):
sudo port install clang-10 +analyzer
- Windows (MSYS2 64-bit):
pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-clang-tools-extra
- Linux (Debian):
sudo apt-get install clang-format-10 clang-tidy-10
- Mac (using home-brew):
- Running (all platforms):
clang-format -i -style="file" my_file.cpp
- Enable GitHub Actions on your fork of the repository.
After enabling, it will execute
clang-tidy
andclang-format
after every push (not a commit).- Click on the tab "Actions", then click on the big green button to enable it.
- The result can create another commit if the actions made any changes on your behalf.
- Hence, it is better to wait and check the results of GitHub Actions after every push.
- Run
git pull
in your local clone if these actions made many changes to avoid merge conflicts.
Most importantly,
- Happy coding!