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{{ package }} Code of Conduct

Our Pledge

In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming environment, we as contributors and maintainers pledge to making participation in our project and our community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body size, disability, ethnicity, sex characteristics, gender identity and expression, level of experience, education, socio-economic status, nationality, personal appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity and orientation.

Our Standards

Examples of behavior that contributes to creating a positive environment include:

  • Using welcoming and inclusive language
  • Being respectful of differing viewpoints and experiences
  • Gracefully accepting constructive criticism
  • Focusing on what is best for the community
  • Showing empathy towards other community members

Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include:

  • The use of sexualized language or imagery and unwelcome sexual attention or advances
  • Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks
  • Public or private harassment
  • Publishing others' private information, such as a physical or electronic address, without explicit permission
  • Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a professional setting

Our Responsibilities

Project maintainers are responsible for clarifying the standards of acceptable behavior and are expected to take appropriate and fair corrective action in response to any instances of unacceptable behavior.

Project maintainers have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or reject comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions that are not aligned to this Code of Conduct, or to ban temporarily or permanently any contributor for other behaviors that they deem inappropriate, threatening, offensive, or harmful.

Scope

This Code of Conduct applies both within project spaces and in public spaces when an individual is representing the project or its community. Examples of representing a project or community include using an official project e-mail address, posting via an official social media account, or acting as an appointed representative at an online or offline event. Representation of a project may be further defined and clarified by project maintainers.

Enforcement

Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be reported by contacting any member of the project team. All complaints will be reviewed and investigated and will result in a response that is deemed necessary and appropriate to the circumstances. The project team is obligated to maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of an incident. Further details of specific enforcement policies may be posted separately.

Project maintainers who do not follow or enforce the Code of Conduct in good faith may face temporary or permanent repercussions as determined by other members of the project's leadership.

Attribution

This Code of Conduct is adapted from the Contributor Covenant, version 1.4, available at https://www.contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4/code-of-conduct.html

For answers to common questions about this code of conduct, see https://www.contributor-covenant.org/faq

Contributing to {{ package }}

This document is a guide to contributing to {{ package }}

We welcome all contributions. You don't need to be an expert (in optimization) to help out.

Checklist

Contributions are made through pull requests. Before sending a pull request, make sure you do the following:

  • Run 'make fmt' to make sure your code adheres to our coding style. This step also includes our license on top of your new files.
  • Write unit tests
  • Run the unit tests and check that they're passing

Building {{ package }} from source

You'll need to build {{ package }} locally in order to start editing code. To install {{ package }} from source, clone the Github repository, navigate to its root, and run the following command:

make install

We assume you have poetry installed.

Contributing code

To contribute to {{ package }}, send us pull requests. For those new to contributing, check out Github's guide.

Once you've made your pull request, a member of the {{ package }} development team will assign themselves to review it. You might have a few back-and-forths with your reviewer before it is accepted, which is completely normal. Your pull request will trigger continuous integration tests for many different Python versions and different platforms. If these tests start failing, please fix your code and send another commit, which will re-trigger the tests.

If you'd like to add a new feature to {{ package }}, please do propose your change on a Github issue, to make sure that your priorities align with ours.

If you'd like to contribute code but don't know where to start, try one of the following:

  • Read the {{ package }} source and enhance the documentation, or address TODOs
  • Browse the [issue tracker]({{ repo }}/issues), and look for the issues tagged "help wanted".

License

A license is added to new files automatically as a pre-commit hook.

Code style

We use black and ruff to enforce our Python coding style. Before sending us a pull request, navigate to the project root and run

make fmt

to make sure that your changes abide by our style conventions. Please fix any errors that are reported before sending the pull request.

Writing unit tests

Most code changes will require new unit tests. Even bug fixes require unit tests, since the presence of bugs usually indicates insufficient tests. {{ package }} tests live in the directory tests, which contains many files, each of which contains many unit tests. When adding tests, try to find a file in which your tests should belong; if you're testing a new feature, you might want to create a new test file.

We use the popular Python pytest framework for our tests.

Running unit tests

We use pytest to run our unit tests. To run all unit tests run the following command:

make test

We keep a close eye on our coverage via

make coverage

Please make sure that your change doesn't cause any of the unit tests to fail.

import codecs
from json import load
from pathlib import Path
import toml
from jinja2 import Template, Environment, FileSystemLoader
def write(file, output_file, **kwargs):
# output the file
folder = Path(__file__).parent
environment = Environment(loader=FileSystemLoader(folder))
template = environment.get_template(file)
output_file = codecs.open(folder.parent / output_file, "w", "utf-8")
# template = Template(folder / file, trim_blocks=True)
output_file.write(template.render(**kwargs))
output_file.close()
if __name__ == "__main__":
#environment = Environment(loader=FileSystemLoader("tmp/"))
#template = environment.get_template("message.txt")
root = Path(__file__).parent.parent
d = toml.load(root / "pyproject.toml")
name = d["tool"]["poetry"]["name"]
repo = d["tool"]["poetry"]["repository"]
write("Contributing.md", "CONTRIBUTING.md", package=name, repo=repo)
write("CodeOfConduct.md", "CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md", package=name, repo=repo)
@tschm
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tschm commented Sep 17, 2023

last line in files

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tschm commented Sep 17, 2023

.PHONY: conduct
conduct: ## Generete CODE of CONDUCT and Contributing
@Poetry run pip install jinja2 toml
@gh gist clone a4a054e3e80a8021c351b027280d3b09 tmp
@Poetry run python tmp/parse.py
@rm -rf tmp

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