Before anything else, please install the git hooks that run automatic scripts during each commit and merge to strip the notebooks of superfluous metadata (and avoid merge conflicts). After cloning the repository, run the following command inside it:
nbdev_install_git_hooks
- Ensure the bug was not already reported by searching on GitHub under Issues.
- If you're unable to find an open issue addressing the problem, open a new one. Be sure to include a title and clear description, as much relevant information as possible, and a code sample or an executable test case demonstrating the expected behavior that is not occurring.
- Be sure to add the complete error messages.
- Open a new GitHub pull request with the patch.
- Ensure that your PR includes a test that fails without your patch, and pass with it.
- Ensure the PR description clearly describes the problem and solution. Include the relevant issue number if applicable.
- Keep each PR focused. While it's more convenient, do not combine several unrelated fixes together. Create as many branches as needing to keep each PR focused.
- Do not mix style changes/fixes with "functional" changes. It's very difficult to review such PRs and it most likely get rejected.
- Do not add/remove vertical whitespace. Preserve the original style of the file you edit as much as you can.
- Do not turn an already submitted PR into your development playground. If after you submitted PR, you discovered that more work is needed - close the PR, do the required work and then submit a new PR. Otherwise each of your commits requires attention from maintainers of the project.
- If, however, you submitted a PR and received a request for changes, you should proceed with commits inside that PR, so that the maintainer can see the incremental fixes and won't need to review the whole PR again. In the exception case where you realize it'll take many many commits to complete the requests, then it's probably best to close the PR, do the work and then submit it again. Use common sense where you'd choose one way over another.
- Docs are automatically created from the notebooks in the nbs folder.
- Ipyannotator uses sphinx and nbdev to build its documentation. To run locally you can run the command
make docs
from the from the root of your repository, this command will create the html files at the_build
folder.
As stated, ipyannotator
uses nbdev
and therefore, the notebooks pages will be converted into docs. For this reason, images should be inside the docs/images
folders, so it can be assible to the documentation. After that, just load the image name when needed.