Thanks for considering to write a Pull Request (PR) for CLI11! Here are a few guidelines to get you started:
Make sure you are comfortable with the license; all contributions are licensed under the original license.
Make sure any new functions you add are are:
- Documented by
///
documentation for Doxygen - Mentioned in the instructions in the README, though brief mentions are okay
- Explained in your PR (or previously explained in an Issue mentioned in the PR)
- Completely covered by tests
In general, make sure the addition is well thought out and does not increase the complexity of CLI11 needlessly.
- Once you make the PR, tests will run to make sure your code works on all supported platforms
- The test coverage is also measured, and that should remain 100%
- Formatting should be done with pre-commit, otherwise the format check will not pass. However, it is trivial to apply this to your PR, so don't worry about this check. If you do want to run it, see below.
- Everything must pass clang-tidy as well, run with
-DCMAKE_CXX_CLANG_TIDY="$(which clang-tidy)"
(if you set"$(which clang-tidy) -fix"
, make sure you use a single threaded build process, or just build one example target). - Your changes must also conform to most of the Google C++ Style Guide rules checked by cpplint. For unused cpplint filters and justifications, see CPPLINT.cfg.
Format is handled by pre-commit. You should install it (or use pipx):
python3 -m pip install pre-commit
Then, you can run it on the items you've added to your staging area, or all files:
pre-commit run
# OR
pre-commit run --all-files
And, if you want to always use it, you can install it as a git hook (hence the name, pre-commit):
pre-commit install
In a commit to a PR, just add
"@all-contributors please add <username> for <contributions>
" or similar (see
https://allcontributors.org). Use code
for code, bug
if an issue was
submitted, platform
for packaging stuff, and doc
for documentation updates.
To run locally, do:
yarn add --dev all-contributors-cli
yarn all-contributors add username code,bug
Remember to replace the emoji in the readme, being careful not to replace the ones in all-contributors if any overlap.
Steps:
- Update changelog if needed
- Update the version in
include/CLI/Version.hpp
. - Find and replace in README (new minor/major release only):
- Replace " 🆕" and "🆕 " with "" (ignores the description line)
- Check for
\/\/$
(vi syntax) to catch leftover// 🆕
- Replace "🚧" with "🆕" (manually ignore the description line)
- Make a release in the GitHub UI, use a name such as "Version X.Y(.Z): Title"