- In order to provide GAMER more context on the data schema structure, and to help users query the schema, these embeddings are fed into tge
- To use this template, click the green
Use this template
button andCreate new repository
. - After github initially creates the new repository, please wait an extra minute for the initialization scripts to finish organizing the repo.
- To enable the automatic semantic version increments: in the repository go to
Settings
andCollaborators and teams
. Click the greenAdd people
button. Addsvc-aindscicomp
as an admin. Modify the file in.github/workflows/tag_and_publish.yml
and remove the if statement in line 65. The semantic version will now be incremented every time a code is committed into the main branch. - To publish to PyPI, enable semantic versioning and uncomment the publish block in
.github/workflows/tag_and_publish.yml
. The code will now be published to PyPI every time the code is committed into the main branch. - The
.github/workflows/test_and_lint.yml
file will run automated tests and style checks every time a Pull Request is opened. If the checks are undesired, thetest_and_lint.yml
can be deleted. The strictness of the code coverage level, etc., can be modified by altering the configurations in thepyproject.toml
file and the.flake8
file.
To use the software, in the root directory, run
pip install -e .
To develop the code, run
pip install -e .[dev]
There are several libraries used to run linters, check documentation, and run tests.
- Please test your changes using the coverage library, which will run the tests and log a coverage report:
coverage run -m unittest discover && coverage report
- Use interrogate to check that modules, methods, etc. have been documented thoroughly:
interrogate .
- Use flake8 to check that code is up to standards (no unused imports, etc.):
flake8 .
- Use black to automatically format the code into PEP standards:
black .
- Use isort to automatically sort import statements:
isort .
For internal members, please create a branch. For external members, please fork the repository and open a pull request from the fork. We'll primarily use Angular style for commit messages. Roughly, they should follow the pattern:
<type>(<scope>): <short summary>
where scope (optional) describes the packages affected by the code changes and type (mandatory) is one of:
- build: Changes that affect build tools or external dependencies (example scopes: pyproject.toml, setup.py)
- ci: Changes to our CI configuration files and scripts (examples: .github/workflows/ci.yml)
- docs: Documentation only changes
- feat: A new feature
- fix: A bugfix
- perf: A code change that improves performance
- refactor: A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
- test: Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests
The table below, from semantic release, shows which commit message gets you which release type when semantic-release
runs (using the default configuration):
Commit message | Release type |
---|---|
fix(pencil): stop graphite breaking when too much pressure applied |
|
feat(pencil): add 'graphiteWidth' option |
|
perf(pencil): remove graphiteWidth option<br>``<br>BREAKING CHANGE: The graphiteWidth option has been removed.``<br>The default graphite width of 10mm is always used for performance reasons. |
(Note that the BREAKING CHANGE: token must be in the footer of the commit) |
To generate the rst files source files for documentation, run
sphinx-apidoc -o docs/source/ src
Then to create the documentation HTML files, run
sphinx-build -b html docs/source/ docs/build/html
More info on sphinx installation can be found here.
Note: Private repositories require Read the Docs for Business account. The following instructions are for a public repo.
The following are required to import and build documentations on Read the Docs:
- A Read the Docs user account connected to Github. See here for more details.
- Read the Docs needs elevated permissions to perform certain operations that ensure that the workflow is as smooth as possible, like installing webhooks. If you are not the owner of the repo, you may have to request elevated permissions from the owner/admin.
- A .readthedocs.yaml file in the root directory of the repo. Here is a basic template:
# Read the Docs configuration file
# See https://docs.readthedocs.io/en/stable/config-file/v2.html for details
# Required
version: 2
# Set the OS, Python version, and other tools you might need
build:
os: ubuntu-24.04
tools:
python: "3.13"
# Path to a Sphinx configuration file.
sphinx:
configuration: docs/source/conf.py
# Declare the Python requirements required to build your documentation
python:
install:
- method: pip
path: .
extra_requirements:
- dev
Here are the steps for building docs in Read the Docs. See here for detailed instructions:
- From Read the Docs dashboard, click on Add project.
- For automatic configuration, select Configure automatically and type the name of the repo. A repo with public visibility should appear as you type.
- Follow the subsequent steps.
- For manual configuration, select Configure manually and follow the subsequent steps
Once a project is created successfully, you will be able to configure/modify the project's settings; such as Default version, Default branch etc.