Contributing Guidelines ======================= To learn more about the purpose of PEPs and how to go about writing a PEP, please start reading at PEP 1 (`pep-0001.txt <./pep-0001.txt>`_ in this repo). Note that PEP 0, the index PEP, is now automatically generated, and not committed to the repo. Before writing a new PEP ------------------------ Has this idea been proposed on `python-ideas `_ and received general acceptance as being an idea worth pursuing? (if not then please start a discussion there before submitting a pull request). More details about it in `PEP 1 `_. Do you have an implementation of your idea? (this is important for when you propose this PEP to `python-dev `_ as code maintenance is a critical aspect of all PEP proposals prior to a final decision; in special circumstances an implementation can be deferred) Commit messages --------------- When committing to a PEP, please always include the PEP number in the subject title. For example, ``PEP NNN: ``. Sign the CLA ------------ Before you hit "Create pull request", please take a moment to ensure that this project can legally accept your contribution by verifying you have signed the PSF Contributor Agreement: https://www.python.org/psf/contrib/contrib-form/ If you haven't signed the CLA before, please follow the steps outlined in the CPython devguide to do so: https://devguide.python.org/pullrequest/#licensing Thanks again to your contribution and we look forward to looking at it! Code of Conduct --------------- All interactions for this project are covered by the `PSF Code of Conduct `_. Everyone is expected to be open, considerate, and respectful of others no matter their position within the project. Run pre-commit linting locally ------------------------------ You can run this repo's basic linting suite locally, either on-demand, or automatically against modified files whenever you commit your changes. They are also run in CI, so you don't have to run them locally, though doing so will help you catch and potentially fix common mistakes before pushing your changes and opening a pull request. This repository uses the `pre-commit `_ tool to install, configure and update a suite of hooks that check for common problems and issues, and fix many of them automatically. If your system has ``make`` installed, you can run the pre-commit checkers on the full repo by running ``make lint``. This will install pre-commit in the current virtual environment if it isn't already, so make sure you've activated the environment you want it to use before running this command. Otherwise, you can install pre-commit with .. code-block:: console python -m pip install pre-commit (or your choice of installer), and then run the hooks on all the files in the repo with .. code-block:: console pre-commit run --all-files or only on any files that have been modified but not yet committed with .. code-block:: console pre-commit run If you would like pre-commit to run automatically against any modified files every time you commit, install the hooks with .. code-block:: console pre-commit install Then, whenever you ``git commit``, pre-commit will run and report any issues it finds or changes it makes, and abort the commit to allow you to check, and if necessary correct them before committing again. Check and fix PEP spelling -------------------------- To check for common spelling mistakes in your PEP and automatically suggest corrections, you can run the codespell tool through pre-commit as well. Like the linters, on a system with ``make`` available, it can be installed (in the currently-activated environment) and run on all files in the repository with a single command, ``make spellcheck``. For finer control or on other systems, after installing pre-commit as in the previous section, you can run it against only the files you've modified and not yet committed with .. code-block:: console pre-commit run --hook-stage manual codespell or against all files with .. code-block:: console pre-commit run --all-files --hook-stage manual codespell **Note**: While fixing spelling mistakes as part of more substantive copyediting and proofreading of draft and active PEPs is okay, we generally advise against PRs that simply mass-correct minor typos on older PEPs that don't significantly impair meaning and understanding, as these tend to create a fairly high level of noise and churn for PEP readers, authors and editors relative to the amount of practical value they provide.