Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
130 lines (86 loc) · 4.79 KB

contribution.md

File metadata and controls

130 lines (86 loc) · 4.79 KB

Contributing to Station Guide

Thank you for considering contributing to * Station Guide *! GirlScript Summer of Code (GSSoC) welcomes contributors of all skill levels, and we are excited to collaborate with you to make this project better.

Please take a moment to review this guide to help you get started.

Table of Contents

Code of Conduct

This project adheres to the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report any unacceptable behavior to the project maintainers.

How to Contribute

Reporting Issues

If you find a bug, security vulnerability, or any other issue, please open an issue in the GitHub Issue Tracker and provide the following details:

  1. A clear and descriptive title.
  2. Steps to reproduce the issue.
  3. Any error messages or screenshots, if available.
  4. Expected and actual behavior.

Suggesting Enhancements

We welcome suggestions for improvements! Please use the same GitHub Issue Tracker and label the issue as an "Enhancement." Provide as much context as possible, including:

  1. The current state and why it's insufficient.
  2. A detailed proposal or solution, if you have one.
  3. Any alternative solutions you have considered.

Submitting Pull Requests

To make changes, follow these steps:

  1. Fork the repository and clone it to your local machine.
  2. Create a new branch following the naming convention: feature/your-feature-name or bugfix/your-bugfix-name.
  3. Make your changes, ensuring your code follows the project's Development Guidelines.
  4. Test your changes thoroughly.
  5. Push your branch and submit a pull request (PR) to the main branch.
  6. In your PR, include:
    • A clear description of what changes were made and why.
    • A reference to any issue it fixes or enhances.

Scoring System

As part of GSSoC, contributors will earn points based on the complexity and impact of their contributions. Here's how points are awarded:

  • Level 1 (10 points): Minor bug fixes, documentation improvements, or small enhancements.
  • Level 2 (25 points): Medium-level features or bug fixes that require more in-depth work, such as improving a module, adding new functionality, or enhancing testing.
  • Level 3 (45 points): Major contributions like implementing significant features, refactoring large parts of the codebase, or fixing critical bugs.

All contributions will be reviewed, and the maintainers will assign points based on the effort and impact.

Development Guidelines

  • Follow the project's code style (describe the language or framework conventions).
  • Write clear, maintainable, and well-documented code.
  • Ensure tests cover your changes.
  • Run linting and formatting tools as required.

Getting Started

1. Clone the Repository

Understanding Cloning:

Cloning creates a local copy of the project on your computer, allowing you to work on it independently. This local copy is a mirror image of the original repository on GitHub or similar platforms.

Use Git to clone this repository into your local development environment:

bash git clone https://github.com/dhairyagothi/StationGuide.git

After Cloning You will see this interface in your system :

image

3. Running the Development Server

Frontend:

  • Open a terminal or command prompt window.
  • Navigate to the frontend directory:
cd frontend
  • Start the frontend development server :
npm run dev

This will typically launch the React application on http://localhost:3000 (or the specified port) in your browser.

Backend:

  • Open another terminal or command prompt window (separate from the frontend window).
  • Navigate to the backend directory:
cd backend

Start the backend development server (typically using nodemon server.js or a similar command):

npm run start

Contact Us

If you have any questions or need further clarification, feel free to reach out:

Project Lead: [Dhairya Gothi] ([email protected])

This file now includes the scoring system for different levels of contributions (Level 1, Level 2, and Level 3) with corresponding points. Adjust the project-specific details such as the project name, links, and email contacts.