Hi! If you are new to the Julia community: welcome, and thanks for trying Julia. Please be sure to respect our community standards in all interactions.
The learning page has a great list of resources for new and experienced users alike. This tutorial video is one recommended starting point, as is the "Invitation to Julia" workshop video from JuliaCon 2015 (slide materials here). The Julia documentation covers the language and core library features, and is searchable. (note: Javascript required).
-
Reporting a potential bug? Please read the "How to file a bug report" section to make sure that all necessary information is included.
-
Contributing code? Be sure to review the contributor checklist for helpful tips on the tools we use to build Julia.
-
Library feature requests are generally not accepted on this issue tracker. New libraries should be developed as packages. Please email the julia-users mailing list to discuss library ideas. Doing so will often lead to pointers to existing projects and bring together collaborators with common interests.
-
Create a GitHub account.
-
Build the software and libraries (the first time takes a while, but it's fast after that). Detailed build instructions are in the README. Julia depends on several external packages; most are automatically downloaded and installed, but are less frequently updated than Julia itself.
-
Keep Julia current. Julia is a fast-moving target, and many details of the language are still settling out. Keep the repository up-to-date and rebase work-in-progress frequently to make merges simpler.
-
Learn to use git, the version control system used by GitHub and the Julia project. Try a tutorial such as the one provided by GitHub.
-
Review discussions on the dev mailing list.
-
For more detailed tips, read the submission guide below.
-
Relax and have fun!
A useful bug report filed as a GitHub issue provides information about how to reproduce the error.
- Before opening a new GitHub issue:
- Try searching the existing issues or the
julia-users
mailing list to see if someone else has already noticed the same problem. - Try some simple debugging techniques to help isolate the problem.
- Try running the code with the debug build of Julia with
make debug
, which produces theusr/bin/julia-debug
. - Consider running
julia-debug
with a debugger such asgdb
orlldb
. Obtaining even a simple backtrace is very useful. - If Julia segfaults, try following these debugging tips to help track down the specific origin of the bug.
- Try running the code with the debug build of Julia with
-
If the problem is caused by a Julia package rather than core Julia, file a bug report with the relevant package author rather than here.
-
When filing a bug report, provide where possible:
- The full error message, including the backtrace.
- A minimal working example, i.e. the smallest chunk of code that triggers the error. Ideally, this should be code that can be pasted into a REPL or run from a source file. If the code is larger than (say) 50 lines, consider putting it in a gist.
- The version of Julia as provided by the
versioninfo()
command. Occasionally, the longer output produced byversioninfo(true)
may be useful also, especially if the issue is related to a specific package.
- When pasting code blocks or output, put triple backquotes (```) around the text so GitHub will format it nicely. Code statements should be surrounded by single backquotes (`). Be aware that the
@
sign tags users on GitHub, so references to macros should always be in single backquotes. See GitHub's guide on Markdown for more formatting tricks.
Julia has a built-in package manager based on git
. A number of packages across many domains are already available for Julia. Developers are encouraged to provide their libraries as a Julia package. The Julia manual provides instructions on creating Julia packages.
For developers who need to wrap C libraries so that they can be called from Julia, the Clang.jl package can help generate the wrappers automatically from the C header files.
There are never enough tests. Track code coverage at Coveralls, and help improve it.
-
Go visit https://coveralls.io/r/JuliaLang/julia.
-
Browse through the source files and find some untested functionality (highlighted in red) that you think you might be able to write a test for.
-
Write a test that exercises this functionality---you can add your test to one of the existing files, or start a new one, whichever seems most appropriate to you. If you're adding a new test file, make sure you include it in the list of tests in
test/choosetests.jl
. http://julia.readthedocs.org/en/latest/stdlib/test/ may be helpful in explaining how the testing infrastructure works. -
Run
make test-all
to rebuild Julia and run your new test(s). If you had to fix a bug or add functionality inbase
, this will ensure that your test passes and that you have not introduced extraneous whitespace. -
Submit the test as a pull request (PR).
- Code for the buildbot configuration is maintained at: https://github.com/staticfloat/julia-buildbot
- You can see the current buildbot setup at: https://build.julialang.org/builders
- Issue 9493 and issue 11885 have more detailed discussion on code coverage.
Coveralls shows functionality that still needs "proof of concept" tests. These are important, as are tests for tricky edge cases, such as converting between integer types when the number to convert is near the maximum of the range of one of the integer types. Even if a function already has some coverage on Coveralls, it may still benefit from tests for edge cases.
By contributing documentation to Julia, you are agreeing to release it under the MIT License.
Julia's documentation is stored in the doc
directory, and like everything else can be modified using git
.
Julia's documentation is built with Sphinx, which supports (and Julia's docs rely heavily on) ReST directives. To build the documentation locally, run
make -C doc html
or
make -C doc latex
from Julia's root directory. Sometimes errors only show up in one of them, so if you're preparing a pull request it is nice if you've checked both formats before you submit.
Existing docstrings now live primarily in base/docs/helpdb.jl
.
It is a goal over time to move the docstrings inline to their respective method definitions.
If you want to edit the body of a method docstring, run the doc/genstdlib.jl
script to regenerate the restructured text files after you have already rebuilt Julia.
(From the top-level source directory, you can do this with make julia-genstdlib
.)
If you want to edit an existing docstring signature, you first have to change the signature in the doc/stdlib
..function
or ..data
definition (not the auto-generated content) and then
edit the helpdb.jl or inline method docstrings. The existing signatures in the doc/stdlib/*.rst
files are pattern matched to base docstrings and the new content overwrites the content in doc/stdlib/
.
The signature definitions must be in sync or else the pattern match will fail and documentation will be lost in the result.
To add entirely new methods to the stdlib
documentation, first add the signature in the appropriate doc/stdlib/*.rst
file before writing the docstring, rebuilding Julia, and re-running doc/genstdlib.jl
.
It is encouraged to write all new docstrings in Markdown markup. If you need to write a more complicated docstring that contains cross-references or citations it can be written in a restructured text codeblock. Many of the existing docstrings are currently restructured text codeblocks and these will be transitioned to Markdown over time. RST codeblocks are delineated with the triple-quote (```rst ```) Makdown codeblock syntax. The content of the codeblock is spliced directly into the final restructured text document unmodified.
Examples written within docstrings can be used as testcases known as "doctests" by annotating code blocks with jldoctest
.
```jldoctest
julia> uppercase("Docstring test")
"DOCSTRING TEST"
```
A doctest needs to match an interactive REPL including the julia>
prompt. To run doctests you first run make julia-genstdlib
then make -C doc doctest
.
For new functionality and other substantial changes, add a brief summary to NEWS.md
. The news item should cross reference the pull request (PR) parenthetically, in the form ([#pr])
; after adding this, run ./julia doc/NEWS-update.jl
from the julia
directory to update the cross-reference links. To add the PR reference number, first create the PR, then push an additional commit updating NEWS.md
with the PR reference number.
By contributing code to Julia, you are agreeing to release it under the MIT License.
The Julia community uses GitHub issues to track and discuss problems, feature requests, and pull requests (PR). You can make pull requests for incomplete features to get code review. The convention is to prefix the pull request title with "WIP:" for Work In Progress, or "RFC:" for Request for Comments when work is completed and ready for merging. This will prevent accidental merging of work that is in progress.
Note: These instructions are for adding to or improving functionality in the base library. Before getting started, it can be helpful to discuss the proposed changes or additions on the mailing list or in a GitHub issue---it's possible your proposed change belongs in a package rather than the core language. Also, keep in mind that changing stuff in the base can potentially break a lot of things. Finally, because of the time required to build Julia, note that it's usually faster to develop your code in stand-alone files, get it working, and then migrate it into the base libraries.
Add new code to Julia's base libraries as follows:
-
Edit the appropriate file in the
base/
directory, or add new files if necessary. Create tests for your functionality and add them to files in thetest/
directory. If you're editing C or Scheme code, most likely it lives insrc/
or one of its subdirectories, although some aspects of Julia's REPL initialization live inui/
. -
Add any new files to
sysimg.jl
in order to build them into the Julia system image. -
Add any necessary export symbols in
exports.jl
. -
Include your tests in
test/Makefile
andtest/choosetests.jl
.
Build as usual, and do make clean testall
to test your contribution. If your contribution includes changes to Makefiles or external dependencies, make sure you can build Julia from a clean tree using git clean -fdx
or equivalent (be careful – this command will delete any files lying around that aren't checked into git).
Note: You can run specific test files with make
:
make test-bitarray
or with the runtests.jl
script, e.g. to run test/bitarray.jl
and test/math.jl
:
./usr/bin/julia test/runtests.jl bitarray math
Make sure that Travis greenlights the pull request with a Good to merge
message.
- 4 spaces per indentation level, no tabs
- use whitespace to make the code more readable
- no whitespace at the end of a line (trailing whitespace)
- comments are good, especially when they explain the algorithm
- try to adhere to a 92 character line length limit
- use upper camel case convention for modules, type names
- use lower case with underscores for method names
- it is generally preferred to use ASCII operators and identifiers over Unicode equivalents whenever possible
- 4 spaces per indentation level, no tabs
- space between if and ( (if (x) ...)
- newline before opening { in function definitions
- f(void) for 0-argument function declarations
- newline between } and else instead of } else {
- if one part of an if..else chain uses { } then all should
- no whitespace at the end of a line
- Avoid working from the
master
branch of your fork, creating a new branch will make it easier if Julia'smaster
changes and you need to update your pull request. - Try to squash together small commits that make repeated changes to the same section of code so your pull request is easier to review, and Julia's history won't have any broken intermediate commits. A reasonable number of separate well-factored commits is fine, especially for larger changes.
- If any conflicts arise due to changes in Julia's
master
, prefer updating your pull request branch withgit rebase
versusgit merge
orgit pull
, since the latter will introduce merge commits that clutter the git history with noise that makes your changes more difficult to review. - If you see any unrelated changes to submodules like
deps/libuv
,deps/openlibm
, etc., try runninggit submodule update
first. - Descriptive commit messages are good.
- Using
git add -p
orgit add -i
can be useful to avoid accidentally committing unrelated changes. - GitHub does not send notifications when you push a new commit to a pull request, so please add a comment to the pull request thread to let reviewers know when you've made changes.
- When linking to specific lines of code in discussion of an issue or pull request, hit the
y
key while viewing code on GitHub to reload the page with a URL that includes the specific version that you're viewing. That way any lines of code that you refer to will still make sense in the future, even if the content of the file changes. - Whitespace can be automatically removed from existing commits with
git rebase
.- To remove whitespace for the previous commit, run
git rebase --whitespace=fix HEAD~1
. - To remove whitespace relative to the
master
branch, rungit rebase --whitespace=fix master
.
- To remove whitespace for the previous commit, run
-
Julia
- Homepage: http://julialang.org
- Mailing lists: http://julialang.org/community/
- IRC: http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=Julia
- Source code: https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia
- Git clone URL: git://github.com/JuliaLang/julia.git
- Documentation: http://julialang.org/manual/
- Status: http://status.julialang.org/
- Code coverage: https://coveralls.io/r/JuliaLang/julia
-
Design of Julia
-
Using GitHub