Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
57 lines (42 loc) · 2.55 KB

CONTRIBUTING.md

File metadata and controls

57 lines (42 loc) · 2.55 KB

Contributing

You don't need to be a developer or a technical writer to make a significant impact on the TensorFlow documentation—just a GitHub account. This guide shows how to make contributions to tensorflow.org.

See the TensorFlow docs contributor guide for guidance. For questions, check out TensorFlow Forum.

Questions about TensorFlow usage are better addressed on Stack Overflow or the [email protected] mailing list.

To contribute to the TensorFlow code repositories, see the TensorFlow code contributor guide and the TensorFlow contribution guidelines.

Contributor License Agreements

We love patches! To publish your changes, you must sign either the individual or corporate Contributor License Agreement (CLA):

  • If you are an individual writing original documentation or source code and you're sure you own the intellectual property, sign an individual CLA.
  • If you work for a company that wants to allow you to contribute your work, sign a corporate CLA.

We can accept your pull requests after you sign the CLA. We can only receive original documentation and source code from you and other people that have signed the CLA.

About our docs

The TensorFlow documentation is written in Markdown and Jupyter/Colab notebooks.

The root of tensorflow.org/ is found in the site/en directory.

Not all technical content on tensorflow.org is located in site/en. Some projects have their repositories under github.com/tensorflow and they contain project-specific documentation. These projects are navigable from the tensorflow/docs site/en directory and include a redirect link to where the docs can be updated.

The API reference is generated from the source code located in the core tensorflow/tensorflow repository and other projects.

Additionally, some non-technical content, images, and design elements are not located in the tensorflow/docs repository.