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Contributing

Welcome to the contributor guide of Ultimate Notion.

This document focuses on getting any potential contributor familiarized with the development processes, but other kinds of contributions are also appreciated.

If you are new to using git or have never collaborated in a project previously, please have a look at contribution-guide.org. Other resources are also listed in the excellent guide created by FreeCodeCamp 1.

Please notice, all users and contributors are expected to be open, considerate, reasonable, and respectful. When in doubt, Python Software Foundation's Code of Conduct is a good reference in terms of behavior guidelines.

Issue Reports

If you experience bugs or general issues with Ultimate-Notion, please have a look on the issue tracker. If you don't see anything useful there, please feel free to fire an issue report.

Tip

Please don't forget to include the closed issues in your search. Sometimes a solution was already reported, and the problem is considered solved.

New issue reports should include information about your programming environment (e.g., operating system, Python version) and steps to reproduce the problem. Please try also to simplify the reproduction steps to a very minimal example that still illustrates the problem you are facing. By removing other factors, you help us to identify the root cause of the issue.

Documentation improvements

You can help improve the documentation of Ultimate Notion by making them more readable and coherent, or by adding missing information and correcting mistakes.

This documentation uses mkdocs as its main documentation compiler. This means that the docs are kept in the same repository as the project code, and that any documentation update is done in the same way was a code contribution.

Tip

Please notice that the GitHub web interface provides a quick way for proposing changes. While this mechanism can be tricky for normal code contributions, it works perfectly fine for contributing to the docs, and can be quite handy. If you are interested in trying this method out, please navigate to the docs folder in the source repository, find which file you would like to propose changes and click in the little pencil icon at the top, to open GitHub's code editor. Once you finish editing the file, please write a message in the form at the bottom of the page describing which changes have you made and what are the motivations behind them and submit your proposal.

When working on documentation changes in your local machine, you can build and serve them using hatch with hatch run docs:build and hatch run docs:serve, respectively.

Code Contributions

Submit an issue

Before you work on any non-trivial code contribution it's best to first create a report in the issue tracker to start a discussion on the subject. This often provides additional considerations and avoids unnecessary work.

Clone the repository

  1. Create a user account on GitHub if you do not already have one.

  2. Fork the project repository: click on the Fork button near the top of the page. This creates a copy of the code under your account on GitHub.

  3. Clone this copy to your local disk:

    git clone git@github.com:YourLogin/ultimate-notion.git
    cd ultimate-notion
    

  4. Make sure hatch and pre-commit is installed using pipx:

    pipx install hatch
    pipx install pre-commit
    

  5. Optionally run hatch config set dirs.env.virtual .direnv to let VS Code find your virtual environments. If you are using VS Code, then it's quite convenient to add a file .vscode/.env in your checkout with:

    NOTION_TOKEN=TOKEN_TO_YOUR_TEST_NOTION_ACCOUNT
    ULTIMATE_NOTION_CONFIG=/path/to/repo/.ultimate-notion/config.toml
    
    These settings will also be respected by pytest using pytest-dotenv.

Implement your changes

  1. Create a branch to hold your changes:

    git checkout -b my-feature
    
    and start making changes. Never work on the main branch!

  2. Start your work on this branch. Don't forget to add docstrings in Google style to new functions, modules and classes, especially if they are part of public APIs.

  3. Check that your changes don't break any unit tests with hatch run vcr-only for tests that do not generate calls to the Notion API or hatch run test for new tests generating API calls.

  4. Run hatch run lint:all and hatch run lint:fix to check the code with ruff & mypy and automatically fix ruff issues if possible.

  5. Add yourself to the list of contributors in AUTHORS.md.

  6. When you’re done editing, do:

    git add <MODIFIED FILES>
    git commit
    
    to record your changes in git.\ Please make sure you see the validation messages from pre-commit and fix and remaining issues.

Info

Don't forget to add unit tests and documentation in case your contribution adds a feature and is not just a bugfix.

Moreover, writing an [descriptive commit message] is highly recommended. In case of doubt, you can check the commit history with:

git log --graph --decorate --pretty=oneline --abbrev-commit --all
to look for recurring communication patterns.

Submit your contribution

  1. If everything works fine, push your local branch to the remote server with:

    git push -u origin my-feature
    
  2. Go to the web page of your fork and click "Create pull request" to send your changes for review.

Find more detailed information in creating a PR. You might also want to open the PR as a draft first and mark it as ready for review after the feedbacks from the continuous integration (CI) system or any required fixes.


  1. Even though, these resources focus on open source projects and communities, the general ideas behind collaborating with other developers to collectively create software are general and can be applied to all sorts of environments, including private companies and proprietary code bases.