tdesktop/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing

This document describes how you can contribute to Telegram Desktop. Please read it carefully.

Table of Contents

What contributions are accepted

We highly appreciate your contributions in the matter of fixing bugs and optimizing the Telegram Desktop source code and its documentation. In case of fixing the existing user experience please push to your fork and submit a pull request.

Wait for us. We try to review your pull requests as fast as possible. If we find issues with your pull request, we may suggest some changes and improvements.

Unfortunately we do not merge any pull requests that have new feature implementations, translations to new languages and those which introduce any new user interface elements.

Telegram Desktop is not a standalone application but a part of Telegram project, so all the decisions about the features, languages, user experience, user interface and the design are made inside Telegram team, often according to some roadmap which is not public.

Build instructions

See the README.md for details on the various build environments.

Pull upstream changes into your fork regularly

Telegram Desktop is advancing quickly. It is therefore critical that you pull upstream changes into your fork on a regular basis. Nothing is worse than putting in a days of hard work into a pull request only to have it rejected because it has diverged too far from upstram.

To pull in upstream changes:

git remote add upstream https://github.com/telegramdesktop/tdesktop.git
git fetch upstream master

Check the log to be sure that you actually want the changes, before merging:

git log upstream/master

Then rebase your changes on the latest commits in the master branch:

git rebase upstream/master

After that, you have to force push your commits:

git push --force

For more info, see GitHub Help.

How to get your pull request accepted

We want to improve Telegram Desktop with your contributions. But we also want to provide a stable experience for our users and the community. Follow these rules and you should succeed without a problem!

Keep your pull requests limited to a single issue

Pull requests should be as small/atomic as possible. Large, wide-sweeping changes in a pull request will be rejected, with comments to isolate the specific code in your pull request. Some examples:

  • If you are making spelling corrections in the docs, don't modify other files.
  • If you are adding new functions don't 'cleanup' unrelated functions. That cleanup belongs in another pull request.

Squash your commits to a single commit

To keep the history of the project clean, you should make one commit per pull request. If you already have multiple commits, you can add the commits together (squash them) with the following commands in Git Bash:

  1. Open Git Bash (or Git Shell)
  2. Enter following command to squash the recent {N} commits: git reset --soft HEAD~{N} && git commit (replace {N} with the number of commits you want to squash)
  3. Press i to get into Insert-mode
  4. Enter the commit message of the new commit
  5. After adding the message, press ESC to get out of the Insert-mode
  6. Write :wq and press Enter to save the new message or write :q! to discard your changes
  7. Enter git push --force to push the new commit to the remote repository

For example, if you want to squash the last 5 commits, use git reset --soft HEAD~5 && git commit

Don't mix code changes with whitespace cleanup

If you change two lines of code and correct 200 lines of whitespace issues in a file the diff on that pull request is functionally unreadable and will be rejected. Whitespace cleanups need to be in their own pull request.

Keep your code simple!

Please keep your code as clean and straightforward as possible. Furthermore, the pixel shortage is over. We want to see:

  • opacity instead of o
  • placeholder instead of ph
  • myFunctionThatDoesThings() instead of mftdt()

Test your changes!

Before you submit a pull request, please test your changes. Verify that Telegram Desktop still works and your changes don't cause other issue or crashes.

Write a good commit message