oh-my-posh/CONTRIBUTING.md
kapsiR 14f7a9318f docs: add conventional comments types hint
This should allow future contributors to get a quick overview
over the supported types of the conventional commit message types
2023-03-05 21:10:00 +01:00

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Contributing

Note we have a code of conduct, please follow it in all your interactions with the project.

Ensure you've read through the documentation so you understand the core concepts of the project. If you're looking to get familiar with go, following the getting started guide can be a good starting point.

Pull Request Process

  1. Ensure any dependencies or build artifacts are removed/ignored before creating a commit.
  2. Commits follow the conventional commits guidelines. (You can look up the supported types along with an explanation here)
  3. Update the documentation with details of changes to the functionality, this includes new segments or core functionality.
  4. Pull Requests are merged once all checks pass and a project maintainer has approved it.

Codespaces / Devcontainer Development Environment

Arguably the easiest way to contribute anything is to use our prepared development environment.

We have a .devcontainer/devcontainer.json file, meaning we are compatible with:

This Linux environment includes all shells supported by oh-my-posh, including Bash, ZSH, Fish and PowerShell, the latter of which is the default.

Configuring Devcontainer's Timezone & Theme

  1. Open the .devcontainer/devcontainer.json file and in the "build" section modify:

  2. Summon the Command Panel (Ctrl+Shift+P) and select Codespaces: Rebuild Container to rebuild your devcontainer. (This should take just a few seconds.)

Recompiling oh-my-posh within

The devcontainer definition preinstalls the latest stable oh-my-posh release at build time.

To overwrite the installation's version inside the running devcontainer, you may use the VSCode task devcontainer: build omp to rebuild your oh-my-posh with that of your running repository's state. (You might see a button for this in your statusbar.)

If the compile succeeds, oh-my-posh --version should reply: development

Should you somehow mess up your devcontainer's OMP install catastrophically, remember that if you do Codespaces: Rebuild Container again, you'll be back to the latest stable release.