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# Contributing
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Telodendria is a fully open source project. As such, it welcomes
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contributions. There are many ways you can contribute, and any way you
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can is greatly appreciated. This document details the ways you can
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contribute, and how to go about contributing.
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## Sponsoring Telodendria
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If you would like to sponsor Telodendria, see the
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[Sponsorship](../README.md#sponsorship) section on the main project
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page. Donations of any size are greatly appreciated.
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## Reporting Issues
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An important way to get involved is to just report issues you find with
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Telodendria during experimentation or normal use. To report an issue,
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go to [Issues](/Telodendria/telodendria/issues) →
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[New Issue](/Telodendria/telodendria/issues/new/choose) and follow the
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instructions.
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> **Note:** GitHub issues are not accepted. Issues may only be
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> submitted to the official [Gitea](https://git.telodendria.io)
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> instance.
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### Feature Requests
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Feature requests are allowed, but note that they are low-priority in
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comparison to existing issues and features. That being said, don't
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hesitate to submit feature requests. Just select the "Feature Request"
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option when submitting an issue.
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## Developing
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If you want to write code for Telodendria, either to fix an issue or
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add a new feature, you're in the right place. Please follow all the
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guidelines in this document to ensure the contribution workflow goes
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as smoothly as possible.
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### Who can develop Telodendria?
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Everyone is welcome to contribute code to Telodendria, provided that
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they are willing to license their contributions under the same license
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as the project itself.
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The primary language used to write Telodendria code is ANSI C. Other
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languages you'll find in the Telodendria repository include shell
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scripts, `mdoc`, a little bit of HTML and CSS, and `Makefiles`.
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Experience with any of these is preferred, but if you want to use
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Telodendria to learn, that's okay too! Telodendria's code base should
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hopefully be a good learning tool, and if you are serious about
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submitting quality work, we'll guide you through the process and
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offer suggestions.
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### What do I need?
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You'll need a couple of things to develop Telodendria:
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- A Unix-like operating system that provides standard POSIX behavior,
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or the Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL), Cygwin, or Msys2 if you are
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running Windows.
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- A C compiler capable of compiling ANSI C89 code (pretty much all of
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them do—pick your favorite, and if you find it doesn't work,
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open an issue!).
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- `make` for building the project.
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- `git` for managing your changes.
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Optionally, you may also find these tools helpful:
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- `indent` for formatting code.
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- `valgrind` for debugging particularly nasty issues.
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### Getting The Code
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Telodendria is developed using Git. The easiest way to contribute
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changes is to fork the main repository, and then creating a pull
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request to ask us to pull your changes into our repo.
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1. If you don't have an account on the
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[Gitea instance](https://git.telodendria.io), create one and sign in.
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1. Fork this repository.
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1. In your development environment, clone your fork:
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```shell
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git clone https://git.telodendria.io/[YOUR_USERNAME]/telodendria.git
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cd telodendria
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```
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Please base your changes on the `master` branch. If you need help
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getting started with Git, that is beyond the scope of this
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document, but you can find many good tutorials on the web.
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### Building & Running
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Telodendria uses the `make` build system.
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**TODO:** Update this section before #19 is closed. Provide quick
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make, run, and install directions (maybe just redirect to Porting for
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install directions), then list all the `make` recipes. Shouldn't be
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as many as were in `td`.
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### Pull Requests
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> **Note:** Telodendria does not accept GitHub pull requests at this
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> time. Please submit your pull requests via Gitea.
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Telodendria follows the standard pull request procedures. Once you have
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made your changes, committed them, and pushed to your fork, you should
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be able to open a pull request on the main repository. When you do, you
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will be prompted to write a description. Be sure to include the
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related issue that you are closing in your description.
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### Code Style
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In general, these are the conventions used by the code base. This
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guide may be slightly outdated or subject to change, but it should be
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a good start. The source code itself is always the absolute source of
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truth, so as long as you make your code look like the code surrounding
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it, you should be fine.
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- All function, enumeration, structure, and header names are
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`CamelCase`. This is preferred to `snake_case` because it is more
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compact.
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- All variable names are `lowerCamelCase`. This is preferred to
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`snake_case` because it is more compact. One exception to this rule is
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if a variable name, such as a member of a struct, directly represents
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a JSON key in an object specified by the Matrix specification, which
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may be in `snake_case`.
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- Enumerations and structures are always `typedef`-ed to their same
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name. The `typedef` should occur in the public API header, and the
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actual declaration should live in the implementation file, unless
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the enumeration or structure is intended to be made fully public.
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- A feature of the code base lives in a single C source file that has a
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matching header. The header file should only export public symbols;
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everything else in the C source should be static.
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- Except where absolutely necessary, global variables are forbidden
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to prevent problems with threads and whatnot. Every variable a
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function needs should be passed to it either through a structure, or
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as a separate argument.
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- Anywhere that C allows curly braces to be optional, there still must
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be curly braces. This makes it easier to read the code by making it
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less ambiguous, and it makes it easier to add on to the code later.
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As far as actually formatting the code goes, such as where to put
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brackets, and whether or not to use tabs or spaces, use `indent` to
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take care of that. The repository contains a `.indent.pro` that should
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automatically be loaded by `indent` to set the correct rules. If you
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don't have a working `indent`, then just indicate in your pull
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request that I should run my `indent` on the code.
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### Documentation
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This project places a strong emphasis on documentation. Well-documented
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code is fundamental to a successful project, so when you are writing
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code, please also make sure that it is documented appropriately.
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- If you are adding a header, make sure you add the necessary comments
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detailing the header and the functions in it.
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- If you are adding a function, make sure you add the necessary
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comments to the appropriate header.
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If your pull request does not also include proper documentation, it
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will likely be rejected.
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