Hi! Thanks for your interest in contributing to NLTK. :-) In this document we'll try to summarize everything that you need to know to do a good job.
We use GitHub to host our code repositories and issues. The NLTK organization on GitHub has many repositories, so we can manage better the issues and development. The most important are:
- nltk/nltk, the main repository with code related to the library;
- nltk/nltk_data, repository with data
related to corpora, taggers and other useful data that are not shipped by
default with the library, which can be downloaded by
nltk.downloader
; - nltk/nltk.github.com, NLTK website with information about the library, documentation, link for downloading NLTK Book etc.;
- nltk/nltk_book, source code for the NLTK Book.
NLTK consists of the functionality that the Python/NLP community is motivated to contribute. Some priority areas for development are listed in the NLTK Wiki
We use Git as our version control system, so the best way to contribute is to learn how to use it and put your changes on a Git repository. There's a plenty of documentation about Git -- you can start with the Pro Git book.
We use the famous gitflow to manage our branches.
Summary of our git branching model:
- Fork the desired repository on GitHub to your account;
- Clone your forked repository locally
(
git clone [email protected]:your-username:repository-name.git
); - Create a new branch off of
develop
with a descriptive name (for example:feature/portuguese-sentiment-analysis
,hotfix/bug-on-downloader
). You can do it switching todevelop
branch (git checkout develop
) and then creating a new branch (git checkout -b name-of-the-new-branch
); - Do many small commits on that branch locally (
git add files-changed
,git commit -m "Add some change"
); - Add your name to the
AUTHORS.markdown
file as a contributor; - Push to your fork on GitHub (with the name as your local branch:
git push origin branch-name
); - Create a pull request using the GitHub Web interface (asking us to pull the
changes from your new branch and add the to our
develop
branch); - Wait for comments.
- Write helpful commit messages.
- Anything in the
master
branch should be deployable (no failing tests). - Never use
git add .
: it can add unwanted files; - Avoid using
git commit -a
unless you know what you're doing; - Check every change with
git diff
before adding then to the index (stage area) and withgit diff --cached
before commiting; - If you have push access to the main repository, please do not commit directly
to
master
: your access should be used only to accept pull requests; if you want to make a new feature, you should use the same process as other developers so you code will be reviewed. - See RELEASE-HOWTO.txt to see everything you need before creating a new NLTK release.
- Use PEP8;
- Write tests for your new features (please see "Tests" topic below);
- Always remember that commented code is dead code;
- Name identifiers (variables, classes, functions, module names) with readable
names (
x
is always wrong); - When manipulating strings, use Python's new-style
formatting
(
'{} = {}'.format(a, b)
instead of'%s = %s' % (a, b)
); - All
#TODO
comments should be turned into issues (use our GitHub issue system); - Run all tests before pushing (just execute
tox
) so you will know if your changes broke something; - Try to write both Python 2 and Python3-friendly code so won't be a pain for us to support both versions.
See also our developer's guide.
You should write tests for every feature you add or bug you solve in the code. Having automated tests for every line of our code let us make big changes without worries: there will always be tests to verify if the changes introduced bugs or lack of features. If we don't have tests we will be blind and every change will come with some fear of possibly breaking something.
For a better design of your code, we recommend using a technique called test-driven development, where you write your tests before writing the actual code that implements the desired feature.
NLTK uses Cloudbees for continuous integration.
Tests can be run locally using tox, e.g. sudo tox -e py34
.
We have two mail lists on Google Groups:
- nltk, for announcements only;
- nltk-users, for general discussion and user questions;
- nltk-dev, for people interested in NLTK development.
Please feel free to contact us through the nltk-dev mail list if you have any questions or suggestions. Every contribution is very welcome!
Happy hacking! (;