Thanks for your interest in contributing to the Stencil Docs! 🎉
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If you have a question about using Stencil, please ask in the Stencil Worldwide Slack group.
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It is required that you clearly describe the steps necessary to reproduce the issue you are running into. Although we would love to help our users as much as possible, diagnosing issues without clear reproduction steps is extremely time-consuming and simply not sustainable.
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The issue list of this repository is exclusively for bug reports, docs issues and feature requests. Non-conforming issues will be closed immediately.
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Issues with no clear steps to reproduce will not be triaged. If an issue is labeled with "needs reply" and receives no further replies from the author of the issue for more than 5 days, it will be closed.
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If you think you have found a bug, or have a new feature idea, please start by making sure it hasn't already been reported. You can search through existing issues to see if there is a similar one reported. Include closed issues as it may have been closed with a solution.
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Next, create a new issue that thoroughly explains the problem.
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We appreciate you taking the time to contribute! Before submitting a pull request, we ask that you please create an issue that explains the bug, docs issue, or feature request and let us know that you plan on creating a pull request for it. If an issue already exists, please comment on that issue letting us know you would like to submit a pull request for it. This helps us to keep track of the pull request and make sure there isn't duplicated effort.
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Looking for an issue to fix? Make sure to look through our issues with the help wanted label!
- Fork the repo.
- Clone your fork.
- Make a branch for your change.
- Run
npm install
(make sure you have node and npm installed first).
- Run
npm run dev
- To add documentation first create a new markdown file in
docs-md
in the folder that fits your doc best. For example, if your doc is covering something in the Stencil compiler, you would put it indocs-md/compiler
. - Write your documentation following the style in the other docs markdown files. Try to aim for being as clear and concise as possible. We recommend checking out the vue.js docs for examples of good docs.
- Open
src/components/stencil-site.tsx
in your editor and add the path to your new docs markdown file but using.html
instead of.md
to here. For example, if my new doc was located atdocs-md/basics/my-cool-doc.md
I would add'my-cool-doc': 'basics/my-cool-doc.html',
to that object. - Open
src/components/site-menu.tsx
in your editor and add a new<stencil-route-link />
with theurl
attribute pointing to the path for your new doc. For example, if I just added the doc mentioned above, my path would bebasics/my-cool-doc
. - Run
npm run dev
to make sure your doc shows up in the menu, that you can navigate to the doc, and that your docs layout looks correct.
- Locate the doc you want to modify in
docs-md/
. - Modify the documentation, making sure to keep the format the same as the rest of the doc.
- Run
npm run dev
to make sure your changes look correct.
We have very precise rules over how our git commit messages should be formatted. This leads to readable messages that are easy to follow when looking through the project history.
type(scope): subject
Should be docs
The scope can be anything specifying the place of the commit change. For example router
, prerendering
, etc. If you make multiple commits for the same doc, please keep the naming of this doc consistent. For example, if you make a change to the router docs and the first commit is docs(router)
, you should continue to use router
for any more commits related to navigation.
The subject contains a succinct description of the change:
- use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes"
- do not capitalize first letter
- do not place a period
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at the end - entire length of the commit message must not go over 50 characters
- describe what the commit does, not what issue it relates to or fixes
- be brief, yet descriptive - we should have a good understanding of what the commit does by reading the subject
By contributing your code to the ionic-team/stencil-site GitHub Repository, you agree to license your contribution under the MIT license.