# Contribution Guidelines First and foremost: Thank you for showing interest in contributing to GGRS! Make sure to read the [Code of Conduct](./CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). If you have a cool example or showcase of GGRS in use, let me know so your project can be highlighted! ## Create an issue - [Bug report](https://github.com/gschup/ggrs/issues/new?assignees=&labels=bug&template=bug_report.md&title=) - [Feature request](https://github.com/gschup/ggrs/issues/new?assignees=&labels=enhancement&template=feature_request.md&title=) ## Contribute to GGRS Please send a [GitHub Pull Request](https://github.com/gschup/ggrs/pull/new/main) with a clear list of what you've done (read more about [pull requests](http://help.github.com/pull-requests/)). When you send a pull request, it would be great if you wrote unit- or integration tests for your changes. Please format your code via `cargo fmt` and make sure all of your commits are atomic (one feature per commit). Always write a clear log message for your commits. One-line messages are fine for small changes, but bigger changes should look like this: >$ git commit -m "prefix: brief summary of the commit > > A paragraph describing what changed and its impact." With the following prefixes commonly used: - `feat`: for new features - `fix`: for fixing a bug - `doc`: for adding/changing documentation - `test`: for adding/changing tests - `chore`: for any minor code cleanups More about the [GitHub flow](https://guides.github.com/introduction/flow/). More about the [Conventional Commits Specification](https://www.conventionalcommits.org/en/v1.0.0/)