Note: If these contribution guidelines are not followed your issue or PR might be closed, so please read these instructions carefully.
- If you find a bug, please first report it using Github issues.
- First check if there is not already an issue for it; duplicated issues will be closed.
- If you'd like to submit a fix for a bug, please read the How To for how to send a Pull Request.
- Indicate on the open issue that you are working on fixing the bug and the issue will be assigned to you.
- Write
Fixes #xxxx
in your PR text, where xxxx is the issue number (if there is one). - Include a test that isolates the bug and verifies that it was fixed.
- If you'd like to add a feature to the library that doesn't already exist, feel free to describe the feature in a new GitHub issue.
- If you'd like to implement the new feature, please wait for feedback from the project maintainers before spending too much time writing the code. In some cases, enhancements may not align well with the project objectives at the time.
- Implement the code for the new feature and please read the How To.
- If you have suggestions for improvements to the documentation, tutorial or examples (or something else), we would love to hear about it.
- As always first file a Github issue.
- Implement the changes to the documentation, please read the How To.
For a contribution to be accepted:
- Documentation should always be updated or added.*
- Examples should always be updated or added.*
- Tests should always be updated or added.*
- Start your PR title with a conventional commit type
(
feat:
,fix:
etc).
*When applicable.
If the contribution doesn't meet these criteria, a maintainer will discuss it with you on the issue or PR. You can still continue to add more commits to the branch you have sent the Pull Request from and it will be automatically reflected in the PR.
- If it is a bigger change or a new feature, first of all file a bug or feature report, so that we can discuss what direction to follow.
- Fork the project on GitHub.
- Clone the forked repository to your local development machine
(e.g.
git clone [email protected]:<YOUR_GITHUB_USER>/twitter-oauth2-pkce.git
).
- Create a new local branch from
main
(e.g.git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Make your changes.
- When committing your changes, make sure that each commit message is clear
(e.g.
git commit -m 'Take in an optional something as a parameter to twitter-oauth2-pkce'
). - Push your new branch to your own fork into the same remote branch
(e.g.
git push origin my-username.my-new-feature
, replaceorigin
if you use another remote.)
Go to the pull request page of twitter_oauth2_pkce and in the top of the page it will ask you if you want to open a pull request from your newly created branch.
The title of the pull request should start with a conventional commit type.
Examples of such types:
fix:
- patches a bug and is not a new feature.feat:
- introduces a new feature.docs:
- updates or adds documentation or examples.test:
- updates or adds tests.refactor:
- refactors code but doesn't introduce any changes or additions to the public API.
If you introduce a breaking change the conventional commit type MUST end with an exclamation
mark (e.g. feat!: Remove the argument from ClassA
).
Examples of PR titles:
- feat: Added new
scope
s - fix: Avoid execute something in
TwitterOAuth2
- docs: Add a example
- docs: Improve the README
- test: Add test for
scope.dart
- refactor: Optimize the structure of
TwitterOAuth2