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42 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown
42 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown
# CONTRIBUTING GUIDELINE
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1. [Luke, use the search](#luke-use-the-search)
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2. [You have a problem](#you-have-a-problem)
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3. [You have a solution](#you-have-a-solution)
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**BONUS:** [You have free time to volunteer](#you-have-free-time-to-volunteer)
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## LUKE, USE THE SEARCH
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May the experiences of other people be with you
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## YOU HAVE A PROBLEM
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See point 1, then look at FAQ or Troubleshooting wiki pages (first we'll have to make them)
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## YOU HAVE A SOLUTION
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See point 1, then go ahead (unless your solution is yet another theme)
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## YOU HAVE FREE TIME TO VOLUNTEER
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Cool! Please have a look at the list below to understand how oh-my-zsh categorizes its issues.
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Classification of issues and
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- Bugs, which may be:
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- Specific of zsh \*
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- Regressions, in which we should summon the author of the offending commit once it is located
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- Feature requests
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- Helpdesk, which may be:
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- Specific of zsh \*
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- Everything else
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\* In the case of bugs, I see the benefit in going through the trouble of responding to that. After all, oh-my-zsh should be the missing link that makes zsh perfect, and hunting down an upstream bug can lead to a submitted PR.
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In the case of helpdesk, minimal response should be done. That is, provide a link to the wiki with the relevant information, or
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add it to the FAQ of the wiki and point to it afterwards.
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