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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

We welcome contributions of all kinds: new lessons, fixes to existing material, bug reports, and reviews of proposed changes are all welcome.

Contributor Agreement

By contributing, you agree that we may redistribute your work under our license. In exchange, we will address your issues and/or assess your change proposal as promptly as we can, and help you become a member of our community.

How to Contribute

The easiest way to get started is to file an issue to tell us about a spelling mistake, some awkward wording, or a factual error. This is a good way to introduce yourself and to meet some of our community members.

  1. If you do not have a GitHub account, you can send us comments by email. However, we will be able to respond more quickly if you use one of the other methods described below.

  2. If you have a GitHub account, or are willing to create one, but do not know how to use Git, you can report problems or suggest improvements by creating an issue. This allows us to assign the item to someone and to respond to it in a threaded discussion.

  3. If you are comfortable with Git, and would like to add or change material, you can submit a pull request (PR). Instructions for doing this are included below. For inspiration about changes that need to be made, check out the list of open issues across the Carpentries.

Note: if you want to build the website locally, please refer to The Workbench documentation.

Where to Contribute

If you wish to change this lesson, add issues and pull requests here.

Using GitHub

If you choose to contribute via GitHub, you may want to look at How to Contribute to an Open Source Project on GitHub. In brief, we use GitHub flow to manage changes:

  1. Create a new branch in your desktop copy of this repository for each significant change.
  2. Commit the change in that branch.
  3. Push that branch to your fork of this repository on GitHub.
  4. Submit a pull request from that branch to the upstream repository.
  5. If you receive feedback, make changes on your desktop and push to your branch on GitHub: the pull request will update automatically.

NB: The published copy of the lesson is usually in the main branch.

Each lesson has a team of maintainers who review issues and pull requests or encourage others to do so. The maintainers are community volunteers, and have final say over what gets merged into the lesson.