# How to contribute mruby is an open-source project which is looking forward to each contribution. ## Your Pull Request To make it easy to review and understand your change please keep the following things in mind before submitting your pull request: * Work on the latest possible state of **mruby/master** * Create a branch which is dedicated to your change * Test your changes before creating a pull request (```./minirake test```) * If possible write a test case which confirms your change * Don't mix several features or bug-fixes in one pull request * Create a meaningful commit message * Explain your change (i.e. with a link to the issue you are fixing) * Use mrbgem to provide non ISO features (classes, modules and methods) unless you have a special reason to implement them in the core ## Coding conventions How to style your C and Ruby code which you want to submit. ### C code The core part (parser, bytecode-interpreter, core-lib, etc.) of mruby is written in the C programming language. Please note the following hints for your C code: #### Comply with C99 (ISO/IEC 9899:1999) mruby should be highly portable to other systems and compilers. For this it is recommended to keep your code as close as possible to the C99 standard (http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/WG14/www/docs/n1256.pdf). Although we target C99, Visual C++ is also an important target for mruby. For this reason a declaration of a local variable has to be at the beginning of a scope block. #### Reduce library dependencies to a minimum The dependencies to libraries should be kept to an absolute minimum. This increases the portability but makes it also easier to cut away parts of mruby on-demand. #### Don't use C++ style comments /* This is the preferred comment style */ Use C++ style comments only for temporary comment e.g. commenting out some code lines. #### Insert a break after the method return value: int main(void) { ... } ### Ruby code Parts of the standard library of mruby are written in the Ruby programming language itself. Please note the following hints for your Ruby code: #### Comply with the Ruby standard (ISO/IEC 30170:2012) mruby is currently targeting to execute Ruby code which complies to ISO/IEC 30170:2012 (http://www.iso.org/iso/iso_catalogue/catalogue_tc/catalogue_detail.htm?csnumber=59579).