| # Manim Development Process |
|
|
| ## For first-time contributors |
|
|
| 1. Install git: |
|
|
| For instructions see <https://git-scm.com/>. |
|
|
| 2. Fork the project: |
|
|
| Go to <https://github.com/ManimCommunity/manim> and click the "fork" button |
| to create a copy of the project for you to work on. You will need a |
| GitHub account. This will allow you to make a "Pull Request" (PR) |
| to the ManimCommunity repo later on. |
|
|
| 3. Clone your fork to your local computer: |
|
|
| ```shell |
| git clone https://github.com/<your-username>/manim.git |
| ``` |
|
|
| GitHub will provide both a SSH (`git@github.com:<your-username>/manim.git`) and |
| HTTPS (`https://github.com/<your-username>/manim.git`) URL for cloning. |
| You can use SSH if you have SSH keys setup. |
|
|
| :::{WARNING} |
| Do not clone the ManimCommunity repository. You must clone your own |
| fork. |
| ::: |
|
|
| 4. Change the directory to enter the project folder: |
|
|
| ```shell |
| cd manim |
| ``` |
|
|
| 5. Add the upstream repository, ManimCommunity: |
|
|
| ```shell |
| git remote add upstream https://github.com/ManimCommunity/manim.git |
| ``` |
|
|
| 6. Now, `git remote -v` should show two remote repositories named: |
|
|
| - `origin`, your forked repository |
| - `upstream` the ManimCommunity repository |
|
|
| 7. Install the Python project management tool `uv`, as recommended |
| in our {doc}`installation guide for users </installation/uv>`. |
|
|
| 8. Let `uv` create a virtual environment for your development |
| installation by running |
|
|
| ```shell |
| uv sync |
| ``` |
|
|
| In case you need (or want) to install some of the optional dependency |
| groups defined in our [`pyproject.toml`](https://github.com/ManimCommunity/manim/blob/main/pyproject.toml), |
| run `uv sync --all-extras`, or pass the `--extra` flag with the |
| name of a group, for example `uv sync --extra jupyterhub`. |
|
|
| 9. Install Pre-Commit: |
|
|
| ```shell |
| uv run pre-commit install |
| ``` |
|
|
| This will ensure during development that each of your commits is properly |
| formatted against our linter and formatters. |
|
|
| You are now ready to work on Manim! |
|
|
| ## Develop your contribution |
|
|
| 1. Checkout your local repository's main branch and pull the latest |
| changes from ManimCommunity, `upstream`, into your local repository: |
|
|
| ```shell |
| git switch main |
| git pull --rebase upstream main |
| ``` |
|
|
| 2. Create a branch for the changes you want to work on rather than working |
| off of your local main branch: |
|
|
| ```shell |
| git switch -c <new branch name> upstream/main |
| ``` |
|
|
| This ensures you can easily update your local repository's main with the |
| first step and switch branches to work on multiple features. |
|
|
| 3. Write some awesome code! |
|
|
| You're ready to make changes in your local repository's branch. |
| You can add local files you've changed within the current directory with |
| `git add .`, or add specific files with |
|
|
| ```shell |
| git add <file/directory> |
| ``` |
|
|
| and commit these changes to your local history with `git commit`. If you |
| have installed pre-commit, your commit will succeed only if none of the |
| hooks fail. |
|
|
| :::{tip} |
| When crafting commit messages, it is highly recommended that |
| you adhere to [these guidelines](https://www.conventionalcommits.org/en/v1.0.0/). |
| ::: |
|
|
| 4. Add new or update existing tests. |
|
|
| Depending on your changes, you may need to update or add new tests. For new |
| features, it is required that you include tests with your PR. Details of |
| our testing system are explained in the {doc}`testing guide <testing>`. |
|
|
| 5. Update docstrings and documentation: |
|
|
| Update the docstrings (the text in triple quotation marks) of any functions |
| or classes you change and include them with any new functions you add. |
| See the {doc}`documentation guide <docs/docstrings>` for more information about how we |
| prefer our code to be documented. The content of the docstrings will be |
| rendered in the {doc}`reference manual <../reference>`. |
|
|
| :::{tip} |
| Use the {mod}`manim directive for Sphinx <manim.utils.docbuild.manim_directive>` to add examples |
| to the documentation! |
| ::: |
|
|
| As far as development on your local machine goes, these are the main steps you |
| should follow. |
|
|
| (polishing-changes-and-submitting-a-pull-request)= |
|
|
| ## Polishing Changes and Submitting a Pull Request |
|
|
| As soon as you are ready to share your local changes with the community |
| so that they can be discussed, go through the following steps to open a |
| pull request. A pull request signifies to the ManimCommunity organization, |
| "Here are some changes I wrote; I think it's worthwhile for you to maintain |
| them." |
|
|
| :::{note} |
| You do not need to have everything (code/documentation/tests) complete |
| to open a pull request (PR). If the PR is still under development, please |
| mark it as a draft. Community developers will still be able to review the |
| changes, discuss yet-to-be-implemented changes, and offer advice; however, |
| the more complete your PR, the quicker it will be merged. |
| ::: |
|
|
| 1. Update your fork on GitHub to reflect your local changes: |
|
|
| ```shell |
| git push -u origin <branch name> |
| ``` |
|
|
| Doing so creates a new branch on your remote fork, `origin`, with the |
| contents of your local repository on GitHub. In subsequent pushes, this |
| local branch will track the branch `origin` and `git push` is enough. |
|
|
| 2. Make a pull request (PR) on GitHub. |
|
|
| In order to make the ManimCommunity development team aware of your changes, |
| you can make a PR to the ManimCommunity repository from your fork. |
|
|
| :::{WARNING} |
| Make sure to select `ManimCommunity/manim` instead of `3b1b/manim` |
| as the base repository! |
| ::: |
|
|
| Choose the branch from your fork as the head repository - see the |
| screenshot below. |
|
|
| ```{image} /_static/pull-requests.png |
| :align: center |
| ``` |
|
|
| Please make sure you follow the template (this is the default |
| text you are shown when first opening the 'New Pull Request' page). |
|
|
| Your changes are eligible to be merged if: |
|
|
| 1. there are no merge conflicts |
| 2. the tests in our pipeline pass |
| 3. at least one (two for more complex changes) Community Developer approves the changes |
|
|
| You can check for merge conflicts between the current upstream/main and |
| your branch by executing `git pull upstream main` locally. If this |
| generates any merge conflicts, you need to resolve them and push an |
| updated version of the branch to your fork of the repository. |
|
|
| Our pipeline consists of a series of different tests that ensure |
| that Manim still works as intended and that the code you added |
| sticks to our coding conventions. |
|
|
| - **Code style**: We use the code style imposed |
| by [Black](https://black.readthedocs.io/en/stable/), [isort](https://pycqa.github.io/isort/) |
| and [flake8](https://flake8.pycqa.org/en/latest/). The GitHub pipeline |
| makes sure that the (Python) files changed in your pull request |
| also adhere to this code style. If this step of the pipeline fails, |
| fix your code formatting automatically by running `black <file or directory>` and `isort <file or directory>`. |
| To fix code style problems, run `flake8 <file or directory>` for a style report, and then fix the problems |
| manually that were detected by `flake8`. |
| - **Tests**: The pipeline runs Manim's test suite on different operating systems |
| (the latest versions of Ubuntu, macOS, and Windows) for different versions of Python. |
| The test suite consists of two different kinds of tests: integration tests |
| and doctests. You can run them locally by executing `uv run pytest` |
| and `uv run pytest --doctest-modules manim`, respectively, from the |
| root directory of your cloned fork. |
| - **Documentation**: We also build a version of the documentation corresponding |
| to your pull request. Make sure not to introduce any Sphinx errors, and have |
| a look at the built HTML files to see whether the formatting of the documentation |
| you added looks as you intended. You can build the documentation locally |
| by running `make html` from the `docs` directory. Make sure you have [Graphviz](https://graphviz.org/) |
| installed locally in order to build the inheritance diagrams. See {doc}`docs` for |
| more information. |
|
|
| Finally, if the pipeline passes and you are satisfied with your changes: wait for |
| feedback and iterate over any requested changes. You will likely be asked to |
| edit or modify your PR in one way or another during this process. This is not |
| an indictment of your work, but rather a strong signal that the community |
| wants to merge your changes! Once approved, your changes may be merged! |
|
|
| ### Further useful guidelines |
|
|
| 1. When submitting a PR, please mention explicitly if it includes breaking changes. |
| 2. When submitting a PR, make sure that your proposed changes are as general as |
| possible, and ready to be taken advantage of by all of Manim's users. In |
| particular, leave out any machine-specific configurations, or any personal |
| information it may contain. |
| 3. If you are a maintainer, please label issues and PRs appropriately and |
| frequently. |
| 4. When opening a new issue, if there are old issues that are related, add a link |
| to them in your new issue (even if the old ones are closed). |
| 5. When submitting a code review, it is highly recommended that you adhere to |
| [these general guidelines](https://conventionalcomments.org/). |
| 6. If you find stale or inactive issues that seem to be irrelevant, please post |
| a comment saying 'This issue should be closed', and a community developer |
| will take a look. |
| 7. Please do as much as possible to keep issues, PRs, and development in |
| general as tidy as possible. |
|
|
| You can find examples for the `docs` in several places: |
| the {doc}`Example Gallery <../examples>`, {doc}`Tutorials <../tutorials/index>`, |
| and {doc}`Reference Classes <../reference>`. |
|
|
| **Thank you for contributing!** |
|
|