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CONTRIBUTING.md

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Contributing to onedark.vim

Please read this document before submitting a Pull Request.

Pull Requests containing changes to files in the autoload/ or colors/ directories without corresponding changes to files in the build/templates directory will not be merged.

Build System

Background Information

onedark.vim's shared color definitions file autoload/onedark.vim and its companion Xresources color palette file are built using a rudimentary templating and build system that allows color definitions to live in a single, central file. (Additional terminal color palette files are themselves generated from the template-produced Xresources file.)

The basic idea is that these files are generated by a build tool that substitutes color values into templates that live in build/templates.

Here are the locations of the files that are generated by the build system, along with the locations of the corresponding templates they are generated from:

Theme Location Template Location
autoload/onedark.vim build/templates/autoload.template.vim
term/One Dark.Xresources build/templates/One Dark.Xresources
term/One Dark.itermcolors build/templates/One Dark.itermcolors
term/One Dark.terminal build/templates/One Dark.terminal
term/One Dark.alacritty build/templates/One Dark.alacritty
term/One Dark.colorscheme build/templates/One Dark.colorscheme

Configure It

  1. Install Node.js (Installing via nvm or homebrew are both better options than the official Node.js installer.)

  2. Run the following from within the root of this repository. This will install the build system's dependencies and will automatically configure a Git pre-commit hook that runs npm test (see below).

> npm install

That's it!

Use It

The build system consists of a single Node.js script, build/build.js, which supports two commands:

  • Running ./build/build.js or npm run build generates theme files from the templates, overwriting changes to the theme files without confirmation.
  • Running ./build/build.js check or npm test checks that the theme files match the template-generated output, without modifying theme files. This command ensures that the theme files perfectly match the templates they are generated from, which is useful for detecting changes that were made to generated theme files but that should have been made in the templates.
  • In addition to running ./build/build.js check, npm test also runs linting and style checks on certain files to catch and prevent simple problems and stylistic inconsistency. If npm test reports any issues, many reported issues can be automatically fixed by running npm run lint:fix.)

The basic development workflow looks like this:

  1. Make changes to the appropriate template files in build/templates, then run npm run build.

  2. Commit your changes with Git. npm test will automatically run before your commit is finalized. If the test fails, fix any inconsistencies between the template files and theme files (or linting/style errors if applicable), then try committing again.

Style Guidelines

Please match the existing comment and whitespace style in all template files.

For the "Language-Specific Highlighting" portion of onedark.vim, blocks for each language should be organized alphabetically ("Markdown" comes before "PHP").

All code changes should pass against the included linting and style checks. These checks are run via husky and lint-staged when you attempt to commit changes. You can manually check for linting and stylistic issues by running npm test, and many reported issues can be automatically fixed by running npm run lint:fix.

Thanks!

Thanks very much for contributing to onedark.vim!