5. Contributing to this Documentation

The documentation lives in its own source tree. We’ll start by forking and cloning the CouchDB documentation GitHub mirror. That will allow us to send the contribution to CouchDB with a pull request.

If you don’t have a GitHub account yet, it is a good time to get one, they are free. If you don’t want to use GitHub, there are alternate ways to contributing back, that we’ll cover next time.

Go to https://github.com/apache/couchdb-documentation and click the “fork” button in the top right. This will create a fork of CouchDB in your GitHub account. If your account is username, your fork lives at https://github.com/username/couchdb-documentation. In the header, it tells me my “GitHub Clone URL”. We need to copy that and start a terminal:

  1. $ git clone https://github.com/username/couchdb-documentation.git
  2. $ cd couchdb-documentation
  3. $ subl .

I’m opening the whole CouchDB documentation source tree in my favourite editor. It gives me the usual directory listing:

  1. ebin/
  2. ext/
  3. .git/
  4. .gitignore
  5. images/
  6. LICENSE
  7. make.bat
  8. Makefile
  9. NOTICE
  10. rebar.config
  11. src/
  12. static/
  13. templates/
  14. themes/
  15. .travis.yml

The documentation sources live in src, you can safely ignore all the other files and directories.

First we should determine where we want to document this inside the documentation. We can look through http://docs.couchdb.org/en/latest/ for inspiration. The JSON Structure Reference looks like a fine place to write this up.

The current state includes mostly tables describing the JSON structure (after all, that’s the title of this chapter), but some prose about the number representation can’t hurt. For future reference, since the topic in the thread includes views and different encoding in views (as opposed to the storage engine), we should remember to make a note in the views documentation as well, but we’ll leave this for later.

Let’s try and find the source file that builds the file http://docs.couchdb.org/en/latest/json-structure.html – we are in luck, under share/doc/src we find the file json-structure.rst. That looks promising. .rst stands for ReStructured Text (see http://thomas-cokelaer.info/tutorials/sphinx/rest_syntax.html for a markup reference), which is an ASCII format for writing documents, documentation in this case. Let’s have a look and open it.

We see ASCII tables with some additional formatting, all looking like the final HTML. So far so easy. For now, let’s just add to the bottom of this. We can worry about organising this better later.

We start by adding a new headline:

  1. Number Handling
  2. ===============

Now we paste in the rest of the main email of the thread. It is mostly text, but it includes some code listings. Let’s mark them up. We’ll turn:

  1. ejson:encode(ejson:decode(<<"1.1">>)).
  2. <<"1.1000000000000000888">>

Into:

  1. .. code-block:: erlang
  2. ejson:encode(ejson:decode(<<"1.1">>)).
  3. <<"1.1000000000000000888">>

And we follow along with the other code samples. We turn:

  1. Spidermonkey
  2. $ js -h 2>&1 | head -n 1
  3. JavaScript-C 1.8.5 2011-03-31
  4. $ js
  5. js> JSON.stringify(JSON.parse("1.01234567890123456789012345678901234567890"))
  6. "1.0123456789012346"
  7. js> var f = JSON.stringify(JSON.parse("1.01234567890123456789012345678901234567890"))
  8. js> JSON.stringify(JSON.parse(f))
  9. "1.0123456789012346"

into:

  1. Spidermonkey::
  2. $ js -h 2>&1 | head -n 1
  3. JavaScript-C 1.8.5 2011-03-31
  4. $ js
  5. js> JSON.stringify(JSON.parse("1.01234567890123456789012345678901234567890"))
  6. "1.0123456789012346"
  7. js> var f = JSON.stringify(JSON.parse("1.01234567890123456789012345678901234567890"))
  8. js> JSON.stringify(JSON.parse(f))
  9. "1.0123456789012346"

And then follow all the other ones.

I cleaned up the text a little but to make it sound more like a documentation entry as opposed to a post on a mailing list.

The next step would be to validate that we got all the markup right. I’ll leave this for later. For now we’ll contribute our change back to CouchDB.

First, we commit our changes:

  1. $ > git commit -am 'document number encoding'
  2. [master a84b2cf] document number encoding
  3. 1 file changed, 199 insertions(+)

Then we push the commit to our CouchDB fork:

  1. $ git push origin master

Next, we go back to our GitHub page https://github.com/username/couchdb-documentation and click the “Pull Request” button. Fill in the description with something useful and hit the “Send Pull Request” button.

And we’re done!

5.1. Style Guidelines for this Documentation

When you make a change to the documentation, you should make sure that you follow the style. Look through some files and you will see that the style is quite straightforward. If you do not know if your formating is in compliance with the style, ask yourself the following question:

  1. Is it needed for correct syntax?

If the answer is No. then it is probably not.

These guidelines strive be simple, without contradictions and exceptions. The best style is the one that is followed because it seems to be the natural way of doing it.

5.1.1. The guidelines

The guidelines are in descending priority.

  1. Syntax

    • Correct syntax is always more important than style. This includes configuration files, HTML responses, etc.
  2. Encoding

    • All files are UTF-8.
  3. Line ending

    • All lines end with \n.
    • No trailing whitespace.
  4. Line length

    • The maximum line length is 80 characters.
  5. Links

    • All internal links are relative.
  6. Indentation

    • 4 spaces.
  7. Titles

    • The highest level titles in a file is over and underlined with =.

    • Lower level titles are underlined with the following characters in descending order:

      1. = - ^ * + # ` : . " ~ _
    • Over and underline match the title length.

  8. Empty lines

    • No empty line at the end of the file.
    • Lists may separated each item with an empty line.