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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing to BLIMP

Hi! First of all, thanks for your interest in contributing. Help in various forms is almost always needed and in any case appreciated.

Overview

BLIMP is written in Python 3.9 with the discordpy commands framework. For dependency management we use Nix. Complex input beyond the capabilities of discordpy is done using TOML, which is the least painful to write markup format i could come up with that has Python bindings.

Getting Started: Coding

If you want to add a new feature, please start out by creating an issue and opening a discussion about it. Pull Requests coming out of the blue won't be accepted. If you want to pick up an existing issue for implementation, leave a note there that you're doing so so that no one else starts on the same work as you do accidentally. Then, you can start actually working on it:

1. Prerequisites

If you're on Linux or Mac, you'll want Nix, if you're on Windows, please use WSL and follow the instructions equivalently.

You will need git in any case. You probably also want a visual git interface, e.g. that of Visual Studio Code (which is a fine code editor too).

You also need a Discord bot token, which you can get from the Applications page of your Discord account. You might also need to create a server to test your bot in.

2. Forking & Cloning

  1. Create a fork, that is, a copy of BLIMP's repository, for your own GitHub account. There's a button somewhere on the top right on the repository main site.
  2. Clone your fork of BLIMP into a directory on your PC by following the instructions listed under "Code"→"Clone" on your fork's GitHub page.

3. Initial Setup

  1. Switch over into the directory you cloned BLIMP into and spin up a development shell using nix-shell. This might take a while, so grab yourself a cup of tea.
  2. Open the file blimp.cfg.example with your text editor and update at the very least the value of discord.token with the bot token you got from Discord. Without this, your bot won't be able to log in. You might also want to change other values. Save the file as blimp.cfg in the same folder.
  3. In your development shell, run python -m blimp to start the bot for the first time. It will automatically create the needed database.

4. Development Workflow

  1. Create a new branch for your feature: git checkout -b just-write-stuff-into-here. This allows you to develop your feature concurrently to others working on other things.
  2. Make whatever changes you think appropriate. If you need help with something while making the changes, don't hesitate to ask in the support server or the issue you're working on! When you save your changes, use Ctrl-C in your development shell to stop the bot and repeat python -m blimp to restart it with your changes applied.
  3. Once your changes are complete, run isort blimp and black blimp in your development shell to format the codebase, followed by pylint blimp to see potential issues with your code. Once happy with the results, stage your changes with git: git add src/file1 src/file2 src/file_n and commit them: git commit. Please don't alter the version number of BLIMP, we'll change it after the merge is done.
  4. Push your work to your fork: git push origin the-previously-picked-branch-name. Then, go to the pull requests page and click the button that should appear to create a pull request based on your recently pushed branch. Write a short summary of your changes; if you think something you've done warrants extra explanations, do so.
  5. Wait for a review. If you want to change more things in your branch, add more commits; don't edit your previous ones.
  6. Wait for your request to be merged into the main branch.
  7. Reset your working copy by checking out main: git checkout main and pulling from the main repository: git pull upstream main.