- Ways to contribute
- Finding an issue
- Asking for help
- Pull request process
- Forking and cloning the project
- Signing commits
Welcome 👋 Thank you for your interest in contributing to MDN Web Docs. We are happy to have you join us! 💖
As you get started, you are in the best position to give us feedback on project areas we might have forgotten about or assumed to work well. These include, but are not limited to:
- Problems found while setting up a new developer environment
- Gaps in our documentation
- Bugs in our automation scripts
If anything doesn't make sense or work as expected, please open an issue and let us know!
We welcome many different types of contributions including:
- New features and content suggestions.
- Identifying and filing issues.
- Providing feedback on existing issues.
- Engaging with the community and answering questions.
- Contributing documentation or code.
- Promoting the project in personal circles and social media.
We have issues labeled good first issue
for new contributors and help wanted
suitable for any contributor.
Good first issues have extra information to help you make your first contribution a success.
Help wanted issues are ideal when you feel a bit more comfortable with the project details.
Sometimes there won't be any issues with these labels, but there is likely still something for you to work on. If you want to contribute but don't know where to start or can't find a suitable issue, speak to us on Matrix, and we will be happy to help.
Once you find an issue you'd like to work on, please post a comment saying you want to work on it.
Something like "I want to work on this" is fine.
Also, mention the community team using the @mdn/mdn-community-engagement
handle to ensure someone will get back to you.
The best way to reach us with a question when contributing is to use the following channels in the following order of precedence:
- Start a discussion
- Ask your question or highlight your discussion on Matrix.
- File an issue and tag the community team using the
@mdn/mdn-community-engagement
handle.
The MDN Web Docs project has a well-defined pull request process which is documented in the Pull request guidelines. Make sure you read and understand this process before you start working on a pull request.
The first step in setting up your development environment is to fork the repository and clone the repository to your local machine.
We require all commits to be signed to verify the author's identity. GitHub has a detailed guide on setting up signed commits. If you get stuck, please ask for help.