We are open to, and grateful for, any contributions made by the community. By contributing to Redux, you agree to abide by the code of conduct.
Before opening an issue, please search the issue tracker to make sure your issue hasn’t already been reported.
We use the issue tracker to keep track of bugs and improvements to Redux itself, its examples, and the documentation. We encourage you to open issues to discuss improvements, architecture, theory, internal implementation, etc. If a topic has been discussed before, we will ask you to join the previous discussion.
For support or usage questions like “how do I do X with Redux” and “my code doesn’t work”, please search and ask on StackOverflow with a Redux tag first.
We ask you to do this because StackOverflow has a much better job at keeping popular questions visible. Unfortunately good answers get lost and outdated on GitHub.
Some questions take a long time to get an answer. If your question gets closed or you don’t get a reply on StackOverflow for longer than a few days, we encourage you to post an issue linking to your question. We will close your issue but this will give people watching the repo an opportunity to see your question and reply to it on StackOverflow if they know the answer.
Please be considerate when doing this as this is not the primary purpose of the issue tracker.
On both websites, it is a good idea to structure your code and question in a way that is easy to read to entice people to answer it. For example, we encourage you to use syntax highlighting, indentation, and split text in paragraphs.
Please keep in mind that people spend their free time trying to help you. You can make it easier for them if you provide versions of the relevant libraries and a runnable small project reproducing your issue. You can put your code on JSBin or, for bigger projects, on GitHub. Make sure all the necessary dependencies are declared in package.json
so anyone can run npm install && npm start
and reproduce your issue.
Visit the issue tracker to find a list of open issues that need attention.
Fork, then clone the repo:
git clone https://github.com/your-username/redux.git
Running the build
task will create both a CommonJS module-per-module build and a UMD build.
npm run build
To create just a CommonJS module-per-module build:
npm run build:lib
The result will be in the lib
folder.
To create just a UMD build:
npm run build:umd
npm run build:umd:min
The result will be in the dist
folder.
To run both linting and testing at once, run the following:
npm run check
To only run linting:
npm run lint
To only run tests:
npm run test
To continuously watch and run tests, run the following:
npm run test:watch
Improvements to the documentation are always welcome. In the docs we abide by typographic rules, so instead of ' you should use ’. Same goes for “ ” and dashes (—) where appropriate. These rules only apply to the text, not to code blocks.
To install the latest version of gitbook
and prepare to build the documentation, run the following:
npm run docs:prepare
To build the documentation, run the following:
npm run docs:build
To watch and rebuild documentation when changes occur, run the following:
npm run docs:watch
The docs will be served at http://localhost:4000.
To publish the documentation, run the following:
npm run docs:publish
To remove previously built documentation, run the following:
npm run docs:clean
Redux comes with official examples to demonstrate various concepts and best practices.
When adding a new example, please adhere to the style and format of the existing examples, and try to reuse as much code as possible. For example, index.html
, server.js
, and webpack.config.js
can typically be reused.
For development convenience, the Webpack configs for the examples are set up so that the redux
module is aliased to the project src
folder when inside of the Redux folder. If an example is moved out of the Redux folder, it will instead use the version of Redux from node_modules
.
To build and test the official Redux examples, run the following:
npm run build:examples
npm run test:examples
Not all examples have tests. If you see an example project without tests, you are very welcome to add them in a way consistent with the examples that have tests.
Please visit the Examples page for information on running individual examples.
The reactjs GitHub org is trying to keep a standard style across its various projects, which can be found over in eslint-config-reactjs. If you have a style change proposal, it should first be proposed there. If accepted, we will be happy to accept a PR to implement it here.
For non-trivial changes, please open an issue with a proposal for a new feature or refactoring before starting on the work. We don’t want you to waste your efforts on a pull request that we won’t want to accept.
On the other hand, sometimes the best way to start a conversation is to send a pull request. Use your best judgement!
In general, the contribution workflow looks like this:
- Open a new issue in the Issue tracker.
- Fork the repo.
- Create a new feature branch based off the
master
branch. - Make sure all tests pass and there are no linting errors.
- Submit a pull request, referencing any issues it addresses.
Please try to keep your pull request focused in scope and avoid including unrelated commits.
After you have submitted your pull request, we’ll try to get back to you as soon as possible. We may suggest some changes or improvements.
Thank you for contributing!