Get Help, Report Bugs or Contribute

Reporting Bugs and Issues, Getting Help, Providing Feedback

We would love to hear from you! We are writing Stingray to be useful to you, so if you encounter problems, have questions, would like to request features or just want to chat with us, please don’t hesitate to get in touch!

The best and easiest way to get in touch with us regarding bugs and issues is the GitHub Issues page. If you’re not sure whether what you’ve encountered is a bug, if you have any questions or need advice getting some of the code to run, or would like to request a feature or suggest additions/changes, you can also contact us via the Slack group or our mailing list.

Please use this link to join Slack or send one of us an email to join the mailing list.

Getting Involved with Development

We encourage you to get involved with Stingray in any way you can! First, read through the README. Then, fork the stingray and notebooks repositories (if you need a primer on GitHub and git version control, look here) and work your way through the Jupyter notebook tutorials for the main modules. Once you’ve familiarized yourself with the basics of Stingray, go to the Stingray issues page and try to tackle one! Finally, you can read these slides from a talk on Stingray in 2021 at the 9th Microquasar Workshop.

For organizing and coordinating the software development, we have a Slack group and a mailing list – please use this link for Slack or send one of us an email to join.

Contributing to Stingray

All great things have small beginnings.

Hello there! We love and appreciate every small contribution you can make to improve Stingray! We are proudly open source and believe our(yes! yours as well) work will help enhance the quality of research around the world. We want to make contributing to stingray as easy and transparent as possible, whether it’s:

  • Reporting a bug

  • Discussing the current state of the code

  • Submitting a fix

  • Proposing new features

A successful project is not just built by amazing programmers but by the combined, unrelenting efforts of coders, testers, reviewers, and documentation writers. There are a few guidelines that we need all contributors to follow so that we can have a chance of keeping on top of things.

Contribution Guidelines

Contributions from everyone, experienced and inexperienced, are welcome! If you don’t know where to start, look at the Open Issues and/or get involved in our Slack channel. This code is written in Python 3.8+, but in general we will follow the Astropy/ Numpy minimum Python versions. Tests run at each commit during Pull Requests, so it is easy to single out points in the code that break this compatibility.

  • Branches:

    • Don’t use your main branch (forked) for anything. Consider deleting your main branch.

    • Make a new branch, called a feature branch, for each separable set of changes: “one task, one branch”.

    • Start that new feature branch from the most current development version of stingray.

    • Name of branch should be the purpose of change eg. bugfix-for-issue20 or refactor-lightcurve-code.

    • Never merge changes from stingray/main into your feature branch. If changes in the development version require changes to our code you can rebase, but only if asked.

  • Commits:

    • Make frequent commits.

    • One commit per logical change in the code-base.

    • Add commit message.

  • Naming Conventions:

    • Change name of the remote origin(yourusername/stingray) to your github-username.

    • Name the remote that is the primary stingray repository( StingraySoftware/stingray) as stingray.

Contribution Workflow

These, conceptually, are the steps you will follow in contributing to Stingray. These steps keep work well organized, with readable history. This in turn makes it easier for project maintainers (that might be you) to see what you’ve done, and why you did it:

  1. Regularly fetch latest stingray development version stingray/main from GitHub.

  2. Make a new feature branch. Recommended: Use virtual environments to work on branch.

  3. Editing Workflow:

    1. One commit per logical change.

    2. Run tests to make sure that changes don’t break existing code.

    3. Code should have appropriate docstring.

    4. Format code appropriately, use black as described below.

    5. Update appropriate documentation if necessary and test it on sphinx.

    6. Write tests that cover all code changes.

    7. If modifications require more than one commit, break changes into smaller commits. Commits involving just the docs might use [docs only] in their commit message to avoid running all the tests. Very trivial commits (e.g. a space in a docstring) might skip all tests with [skip ci] in their commit message.

    8. Write a changelog entry in towncrier format (see below)

    9. Push the code on your remote(forked) repository.

  4. All code changes should be submitted via PRs (i.e. fork, branch, work on stuff, just submit pull request). Code Reviews are super-useful: another contributor can review the code, which means both the contributor and reviewer will be up to date with how everything fits together, and can get better by reading each other’s code! :)

  5. Take feedback and make changes/revise the PR as asked.

Coding Guidelines

Compatibility and Dependencies

  • Compatibility: All code must be compatible with Python 3.8 or later, and with the latest two major releases of Astropy.

  • Dependency Management:

    • The core package and affiliated packages should be importable with no dependencies other than the Python Standard Library, astropy>=4.0, numpy>=1.17.0, scipy>=1.1, matplotlib>=3.0

    • Additional dependencies are allowed for sub-modules or in function calls, but they must be noted in the package documentation and should only affect the relevant component. In functions and methods, the optional dependency should use a normal import statement, which will raise an ImportError if the dependency is not available.

Coding Style and Conventions

  • Style Guide:

    • Follow the PEP8 style guide. Follow the existing coding style within the sub-package and avoid changes that are purely stylistic.

    • Indentation should be ONLY with four spaces no mixing of tabs-and-spaces.

    • Maximum line length should be 100 characters unless doing so makes the code unreadable, ugly.

    • Functions and methods should be lower-case only, and separated by a _ in case of multiple words eg. my_new_method.

    • Use verbose variable names (readability > economy). Only loop iteration variables are allowed to be a single letter.

    • Classes start with an upper-case letter and use CamelCase eg. MyNewClass.

    • Inline comments should start with two spaces and a single #.

  • Formatting Style: The new Python 3 formatting style should be used, i.e. f-strings f"{variable_name}" or "{0}".format(variable_name}should be used instead of "%s" % (variable_name).

  • Linter/Style Guide Checker: Our testing infrastructure currently enforces a subset of the PEP8 style guide. You can check locally whether your changes have followed these by running flake8 with the following command:

    flake8 astropy --count --select=E101,W191,W291,W292,W293,W391,E111,E112,E113,E30,E502,E722,E901,E902,E999,F822,F823

  • Code Formatters: We follow Astropy, enforcing this style guide using the black code formatter, see The Black Code Style for details. Please run

    black stingray

    before each commit

  • Imports:

    • Absolute imports are to be used in general. The exception to this is relative imports of the form from . import modulename, this convention makes it clearer what code is from the current sub-module as opposed to from another. It is best to use when referring to files within the same sub-module.

    • The import numpy as np, import scipy as sp, import matplotlib as mpl, and import matplotlib.pyplot as plt naming conventions should be used wherever relevant. from packagename import * should never be used, except as a tool to flatten the namespace of a module.

  • Variable access in Classes:

    • Classes should either use direct variable access, or Python’s property mechanism for setting object instance variables. get_value/set_value style methods should be used only when getting and setting the values requires a computationally-expensive operation.

    • Attribute names should be descriptive if possible, use names of desserts otherwise (e.g. for dummy test classes)

  • super() function: Classes should use the built-in super() function when making calls to methods in their super-class(es) unless there are specific reasons not to. super() should be used consistently in all sub-classes since it does not work otherwise.

  • Multiple Inheritance: Multiple inheritance should be avoided in general without good reason.

  • init.py: The __init__.py files for modules should not contain any significant implementation code. __init__.py can contain docstrings and code for organizing the module layout, however if a module is small enough that it fits in one file, it should simply be a single file, rather than a directory with an __init__.py file.

Standard output, warnings, and errors

  • Print Statement: Used only for outputs in methods and scenarios explicitly requested by the user

  • Errors and Exceptions: Always use the raise with built-in or custom exception classes. The nondescript Exception class should be avoided as much as possible, in favor of more specific exceptions (IOError, ValueError etc.).

  • Warnings: Always use the warnings.warn(message, warning_class)for warnings. These get redirected to log.warning() by default, but one can still use the standard warning-catching mechanism and custom warning classes.

  • Debugging and Informational messages: Always use log.info(message) and log.debug(message). The logging system uses the built-in Python logging module.

Data and Configuration

  • Storing Data:

    • Packages can include data in a directory named data inside a subpackage source directory as long as it is less than about 100 kB.

    • If the data exceeds this size, it should be hosted outside the source code repository, either at a third-party location on the internet.

Documentation and Testing

  • Docstrings:

    • Docstrings must be provided for all public classes, methods, and functions.

    • Docstrings should follow the numpydoc style and reStructured Text format.

    • Write usage examples in the docstrings of all classes and functions whenever possible. These examples should be short and simple to reproduce. Users should be able to copy them verbatim and run them.

  • Unit tests: Provided for as many public methods and functions as possible, and should adhere to the standards set in the Testing Guidelines.

  • Building Documentation:

    • Use sphinx to build the documentation.

    • All extra documentation should go into a /docs sub-directory under the main stingray directory.

Updating and Maintaining the Changelog

Stingray uses `towncrier <https://pypi.org/project/towncrier/>`__ which is used to generate the CHANGELOG.rst file at the root of the package.

As described in docs/changes/README.rst, the changelog fragment files should be added to each pull request. The changelog will be read by users, so this description should be aimed at stingray users instead of describing internal changes which are only relevant to the developers. The idea is that the changelog lists all new features, API changes, bugfixes, and so on that have been added to stingray between versions so that a user can easily follow the changes without having to go through the entire git log.

The towncrier tool will automatically reflow your text. You can install towncrier and then run towncrier --draft if you want to get a preview of how your change will look in the final release notes.

Testing Guidelines

The testing framework used by stingray is the pytest framework with tox. To run the tests, you will need to make sure you have the pytest package (version 3.1 or later) as well as the tox tool installed.

  • Execute tests using the tox -e <test environment> command.

  • All tests should be py.test compliant: http://pytest.org/latest/.

  • Keep all tests in a /tests subdirectory under the main stingray directory.

  • Write one test script per module in the package.

  • Extra examples can go into an /examples folder in the main stingray directory, scripts that gather various data analysis tasks into longer procedures into a /scripts folder in the same location.

Community Guidelines

Our Pledge

In the interest of fostering an open and welcoming environment, we as contributors and maintainers pledge to making participation in our project and our community a harassment-free experience for everyone, regardless of age, body size, disability, ethnicity, gender identity and expression, level of experience, nationality, personal appearance, race, religion, or sexual identity and orientation.

Our Standards

Examples of behavior that contributes to creating a positive environment include:

  • Using welcoming and inclusive language

  • Being respectful of differing viewpoints and experiences

  • Gracefully accepting constructive criticism

  • Focusing on what is best for the community

  • Showing empathy towards other community members

Examples of unacceptable behavior by participants include:

  • The use of sexualized language or imagery and unwelcome sexual attention or advances

  • Trolling, insulting/derogatory comments, and personal or political attacks

  • Public or private harassment

  • Publishing others’ private information, such as a physical or electronic address, without explicit permission

  • Other conduct which could reasonably be considered inappropriate in a professional setting

Our Responsibilities

Project maintainers are responsible for clarifying the standards of acceptable behavior and are expected to take appropriate and fair corrective action in response to any instances of unacceptable behavior.

Project maintainers have the right and responsibility to remove, edit, or reject comments, commits, code, wiki edits, issues, and other contributions that are not aligned to this Code of Conduct, or to ban temporarily or permanently any contributor for other behaviors that they deem inappropriate, threatening, offensive, or harmful.

Scope

This Code of Conduct applies both within project spaces and in public spaces when an individual is representing the project or its community. Examples of representing a project or community include using an official project e-mail address, posting via an official social media account, or acting as an appointed representative at an online or offline event. Representation of a project may be further defined and clarified by project maintainers.

Enforcement

Instances of abusive, harassing, or otherwise unacceptable behavior may be reported by contacting the project team at any of our personal email addresses or through private Slack communication. The project team will review and investigate all complaints, and will respond in a way that it deems appropriate to the circumstances. The project team is obligated to maintain confidentiality with regard to the reporter of an incident. Further details of specific enforcement policies may be posted separately.

Project maintainers who do not follow or enforce the Code of Conduct in good faith may face temporary or permanent repercussions as determined by other members of the project’s leadership.

Attribution

This Code of Conduct is adapted from the Contributor Covenant, version 1.4, available at http://contributor-covenant.org/version/1/4