Thank you for your interest in contributing to the avrgirl project to make it even better!
Not sure where to start? Check out the currently filed issues to see if there's anything there you'd like to work on.
Please ensure first that someone is not already working on an issue. If the issue seems stale or inactive and you want to take it over, get in touch with noopkat, the assigned person (check the comments on the issue for whom), or simply comment on the issue asking for status.
AVRGirl Arduino has a built-in manual testing tool called Test Pilot. It allows you to run a local test with an Arduino plugged in, and generates a tidy report for you to submit for feedback. No coding required, just a few button presses / keyboard taps in a browser window! I would really appreciate your help testing this software on your own unique, local computer.
Once AVRGirl Arduino is globally installed on your machine using npm install -g avrgirl-arduino@latest
, type avrgirl-arduino test-pilot
into your terminal program and follow the prompts. Shouldn't take more than two minutes of your time, but will make a big difference to ensuring any issues are reported and fixed promptly!
The best thing to do here is to file an issue if there already isn't one. If it's something fairly obviously needed (in your opinion) and you are happy to code it, feel free to open a pull request without filing an issue first.
Run a quick look through the currently open and closed issues and pull requests to make sure it hasn't already been reported or closed. If it's unique, feel free to open an issue.
On average, Arduino boards cost between $15 and $50, depending on the tech included on it. This can add up really quickly, and I've invested a substantial amount of money into the avrgirl project so far to continually expand support for new hardware. If you'd like to donate funds to help me purchase more hardware for testing purposes, please do so here, and thank you ever so much!
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Fork this repository and clone the new fork locally.
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Run
npm install
to install the dev dependencies. -
Make your changes in a new git branch:
git checkout -b my-fix-branch master
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Follow the coding style of this project. We base our style on the Airbnb styleguide
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Create your patch/feature, including appropriate tests if a test suite is present
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Commit your changes using a descriptive commit message
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Rebase on master if your branch falls behind on commits
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Run the local tests via
npm test
to make sure everything is passing -
Push up your new branch to your forked repo
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In GitHub, send a pull request to
avrgirl-arduino:master
. Include an explanation of what you did, and reference any issues if they are related.