This also updates the LICENSE year. [ci skip]
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Contributing to Select2
Looking to contribute something to Select2? Here's how you can help.
Please take a moment to review this document in order to make the contribution process easy and effective for everyone involved.
Following these guidelines helps to communicate that you respect the time of the developers managing and developing this open source project. In return, they should reciprocate that respect in addressing your issue or assessing patches and features.
Using the issue tracker
When reporting bugs or requesting features, the issue tracker on GitHub is the recommended channel to use.
The issue tracker is not a place for support requests. The mailing list or IRC channel are better places to get help.
Reporting bugs with Select2
We really appreciate clear bug reports that consistently show an issue within Select2.
The ideal bug report follows these guidelines:
- Use the GitHub issue search — Check if the issue has already been reported.
- Check if the issue has been fixed — Try to reproduce the problem
using the code in the
master
branch. - Isolate the problem — Try to create an isolated test case that consistently reproduces the problem.
Please try to be as detailed as possible in your bug report, especially if an isolated test case cannot be made. Some useful questions to include the answer to are:
- What steps can be used to reproduce the issue?
- What is the bug and what is the expected outcome?
- What browser(s) and Operating System have you tested with?
- Does the bug happen consistently across all tested browsers?
- What version of jQuery are you using? And what version of Select2?
- Are you using Select2 with other plugins?
All of these questions will help others fix and identify any potential bugs.
Requesting features in Select2
Select2 is a large library that carries with it a lot of functionality. Because of this, many feature requests will not be implemented in the core library.
Before starting work on a major feature for Select2, contact the community first or you may risk spending a considerable amount of time on something which the project developers are not interested in bringing into the project.
Triaging issues and pull requests
Anyone can help the project maintainers triage issues and review pull requests.
Handling new issues
Select2 regularly receives new issues which need to be tested and organized.
When a new issue that comes in that is similar to another existing issue, it
should be checked to make sure it is not a duplicate. Duplicates issues should
be marked by replying to the issue with "Duplicate of #[issue number]" where
[issue number]
is the url or issue number for the existing issue. This will
allow the project maintainers to quickly close off additional issues and keep
the discussion focused within a single issue.
If you can test issues that are reported to Select2 that contain test cases and confirm under what conditions bugs happen, that will allow others to identify what causes a bug quicker.
Reviewing pull requests
It is very common for pull requests to be opened for issues that contain a clear solution to the problem. These pull requests should be rigorously reviewed by the community before being accepted. If you are not sure about a piece of submitted code, or know of a better way to do something, do not hesitate to make a comment on the pull request.
Reviving old tickets
If you come across tickets which have not been updated for a while, you are
encouraged to revive them. While this can be as simple as saying :+1:
, it is
best if you can include more information on the issue. Common bugs and feature
requests are more likely to be fixed, whether it is by the community or the
developers, so keeping tickets up to date is encouraged.
Licensing
It should also be made clear that all code contributed to Select must be licensable under the MIT license. Code that cannot be released under this license cannot be accepted into the project.