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Contributing guide¤

If you are planning to develop OCRed, or want to use the latest commit of OCRed on your local machine, you might want to install it from the source. This installation is not recommended for users who want to use the stable version of OCRed. The steps below describe the installation process of OCRed's latest commit. It also describes how to test OCRed's codebase and build OCRed's documentation.

Note: OCRed uses Scikit-HEP's developer information as a reference for all the development work. The guide is a general and much more explained collection of documentation available for developing Scikit-HEP packages. OCRed is not a Scikit-HEP package, but it still loosely follows this developer guide as it is absolutely amazing!

Installing OCRed¤

We recommend using a virtual environment to install OCRed. This would isolate the library from your global Python environment, which would be beneficial for reproducing bugs, and the overall development of OCRed. The first step would be to clone OCRed -

git clone https://github.com/Scikit-hep/OCRed.git

and then we can change the current working directory and enter OCRed -

cd OCRed

Creating a virtual environment¤

A virtual environment can be set up and activated using venv in both UNIX and Windows systems.

UNIX:

python3 -m venv .env
. .env/bin/activate

Windows:

python -m venv .env
.env\bin\activate

Installation¤

The developer installation of OCRed comes with a lot of options -

  • test: the test dependencies
  • docs: extra dependencies to build and develop OCRed's documentation
  • dev: installs the test and docs dependencies
  • nltk: installs nltk

These options can be used with pip with the editable (-e) mode of installation in the following ways -

pip install -e .[dev,test]

For example, if you want to install the docs dependencies along with the dependencies included above, use -

pip install -e .[dev,test,docs]

Adding OCRed for notebooks¤

OCRed can be added to the notebooks using the following commands -

python -m ipykernel install --user --name ocred

Activating pre-commit¤

OCRed uses a set of pre-commit hooks and the pre-commit bot to format, type-check, and prettify the codebase. The hooks can be installed locally using -

pre-commit install

This would run the checks every time a commit is created locally. The checks will only run on the files modified by that commit, but the checks can be triggered for all the files using -

pre-commit run --all-files

If you would like to skip the failing checks and push the code for further discussion, use the --no-verify option with git commit.

Testing OCRed¤

OCRed is tested with pytest and xdoctest. pytest is responsible for testing the code, whose configuration is available in pyproject.toml, and on the other hand, xdoctest is responsible for testing the examples available in every docstring, which prevents them from going stale. Additionally, OCRed also uses pytest-cov to calculate the coverage of these unit tests.

Running tests locally¤

The tests can be executed using the test dependencies of OCRed in the following way -

python -m pytest -ra

Running tests with coverage locally¤

The coverage value can be obtained while running the tests using pytest-cov in the following way -

python -m pytest -ra --cov=ocred tests/

Running doctests¤

The doctests can be executed using the test dependencies of OCRed in the following way -

xdoctest ./src/ocred/

A much more detailed guide on testing with pytest is available here.

Documenting OCRed¤

OCRed's documentation is mainly written in the form of docstrings and Markdown. The docstrings include the description, arguments, examples, return values, and attributes of a class or a function, and the .md files enable us to render this documentation on OCRed's documentation website.

OCRed primarily uses MkDocs and mkdocstrings for rendering documentation on its website. The configuration file (mkdocs.yml) for MkDocs can be found here. The documentation is deployed on https://readthedocs.io here.

Ideally, with the addition of every new feature to OCRed, documentation should be added using comments, docstrings, and .md files.

Building documentation locally¤

The documentation is located in the docs folder of the main repository. This documentation can be generated using the docs dependencies of OCRed in the following way -

mkdocs serve

The commands executed above will clean any existing documentation build, create a new build (in ./site/), and serve it on your localhost. To just build the documentation, use -

mkdocs build

Nox¤

OCRed supports running various critical commands using nox to make them less intimidating for new developers. All of these commands (or sessions in the language of nox) - lint, tests, doctests, docs, and build - are defined in noxfile.py.

nox can be installed via pip using -

pip install nox

The default sessions (lint, tests, and doctests) can be executed using -

nox

Running pre-commit with nox¤

The pre-commit hooks can be run with nox in the following way -

nox -s lint

Running tests with nox¤

Tests can be run with nox in the following way -

nox -s tests

Building documentation with nox¤

Docs can be built with nox in the following way -

nox -s docs

Use the following command if you want to deploy the docs on localhost -

nox -s docs -- serve