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536 lines
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ReStructuredText
536 lines
17 KiB
ReStructuredText
============
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Contributing
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============
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.. contents::
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Contributing happens via "Pull requests" (PR) on github. Every PR needs to be
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reviewed before it can be merged and the Continuous Integration should be green.
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The PR has to be approved (and is often merged too) by one "code owner", either
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by the code owner who is responsible for the subsystem the PR belongs to or by
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two core developers or by Araq.
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See `codeowners <codeowners.html>`_ for more details.
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Writing tests
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=============
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There are 3 types of tests:
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1. ``runnableExamples`` documentation comment tests, ran by ``nim doc mymod.nim``
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These end up in documentation and ensure documentation stays in sync with code.
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2. tests in ``when isMainModule:`` block, ran by ``nim c mymod.nim``
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``nimble test`` also typially runs these in external nimble packages.
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3. testament tests, e.g.: ``tests/stdlib/tos.nim`` (only used for Nim repo).
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Not all the tests follow the convention here, feel free to change the ones
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that don't. Always leave the code cleaner than you found it.
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Stdlib
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------
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If you change the stdlib (anything under ``lib/``, e.g. ``lib/pure/os.nim``),
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put a test in the file you changed. Add the tests under a ``when isMainModule:``
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condition so they only get executed when the tester is building the
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file. Each test should be in a separate ``block:`` statement, such that
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each has its own scope. Use boolean conditions and ``doAssert`` for the
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testing by itself, don't rely on echo statements or similar.
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Sample test:
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.. code-block:: nim
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when isMainModule:
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block: # newSeqWith tests
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var seq2D = newSeqWith(4, newSeq[bool](2))
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seq2D[0][0] = true
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seq2D[1][0] = true
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seq2D[0][1] = true
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doAssert seq2D == @[@[true, true], @[true, false],
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@[false, false], @[false, false]]
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# doAssert with `not` can now be done as follows:
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doAssert not (1 == 2)
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Newer tests tend to be run via ``testament`` rather than via ``when isMainModule:``,
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e.g. ``tests/stdlib/tos.nim``; this allows additional features such as custom
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compiler flags; for more details see below.
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Compiler
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--------
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The tests for the compiler use a testing tool called ``testament``. They are all
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located in ``tests/`` (e.g.: ``tests/destructor/tdestructor3.nim``).
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Each test has its own file. All test files are prefixed with ``t``. If you want
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to create a file for import into another test only, use the prefix ``m``.
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At the beginning of every test is the expected behavior of the test.
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Possible keys are:
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- ``cmd``: A compilation command template e.g. ``nim $target --threads:on $options $file``
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- ``output``: The expected output (stdout + stderr), most likely via ``echo``
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- ``exitcode``: Exit code of the test (via ``exit(number)``)
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- ``errormsg``: The expected compiler error message
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- ``file``: The file the errormsg was produced at
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- ``line``: The line the errormsg was produced at
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For a full spec, see here: ``testament/specs.nim``
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An example for a test:
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.. code-block:: nim
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discard """
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errormsg: "type mismatch: got (PTest)"
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"""
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type
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PTest = ref object
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proc test(x: PTest, y: int) = nil
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var buf: PTest
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buf.test()
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Running tests
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=============
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You can run the tests with
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::
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./koch tests
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which will run a good subset of tests. Some tests may fail. If you
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only want to see the output of failing tests, go for
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::
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./koch tests --failing all
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You can also run only a single category of tests. A category is a subdirectory
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in the ``tests`` directory. There are a couple of special categories; for a
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list of these, see ``testament/categories.nim``, at the bottom.
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::
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./koch tests c lib # compiles/runs stdlib modules, including `isMainModule` tests
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./koch tests c megatest # runs a set of tests that can be combined into 1
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To run a single test:
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::
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./koch test run <category>/<name> # e.g.: tuples/ttuples_issues
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./koch test run tests/stdlib/tos.nim # can also provide relative path
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For reproducible tests (to reproduce an environment more similar to the one
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run by Continuous Integration on travis/appveyor), you may want to disable your
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local configuration (e.g. in ``~/.config/nim/nim.cfg``) which may affect some
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tests; this can also be achieved by using
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``export XDG_CONFIG_HOME=pathtoAlternateConfig`` before running ``./koch``
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commands.
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Comparing tests
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===============
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Test failures can be grepped using ``Failure:``.
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The tester can compare two test runs. First, you need to create the
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reference test. You'll also need to the commit id, because that's what
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the tester needs to know in order to compare the two.
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::
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git checkout devel
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DEVEL_COMMIT=$(git rev-parse HEAD)
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./koch tests
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Then switch over to your changes and run the tester again.
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::
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git checkout your-changes
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./koch tests
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Then you can ask the tester to create a ``testresults.html`` which will
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tell you if any new tests passed/failed.
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::
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./koch tests --print html $DEVEL_COMMIT
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Deprecation
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===========
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Backward compatibility is important, so instead of a rename you need to deprecate
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the old name and introduce a new name:
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.. code-block:: nim
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# for routines (proc/template/macro/iterator) and types:
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proc oldProc(a: int, b: float): bool {.deprecated:
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"deprecated since v1.2.3; use `newImpl: string -> int` instead".} = discard
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# for (const/var/let/fields) the msg is not yet supported:
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const Foo {.deprecated.} = 1
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# for enum types, you can deprecate the type or some elements
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# (likewise with object types and their fields):
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type Bar {.deprecated.} = enum bar0, bar1
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type Barz = enum baz0, baz1 {.deprecated.}, baz2
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See also `Deprecated <manual.html#pragmas-deprecated-pragma>`_
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pragma in the manual.
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Documentation
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=============
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When contributing new procs, be sure to add documentation, especially if
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the proc is public. Even private procs benefit from documentation and can be
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viewed using ``nim doc --docInternal foo.nim``.
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Documentation begins on the line
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following the ``proc`` definition, and is prefixed by ``##`` on each line.
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Runnable code examples are also encouraged, to show typical behavior with a few
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test cases (typically 1 to 3 ``assert`` statements, depending on complexity).
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These ``runnableExamples`` are automatically run by ``nim doc mymodule.nim``
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as well as ``testament`` and guarantee they stay in sync.
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.. code-block:: nim
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proc addBar*(a: string): string =
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## Adds "Bar" to `a`.
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runnableExamples:
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assert "baz".addBar == "bazBar"
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result = a & "Bar"
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See `parentDir <os.html#parentDir,string>`_ example.
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The RestructuredText Nim uses has a special syntax for including code snippets
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embedded in documentation; these are not run by ``nim doc`` and therefore are
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not guaranteed to stay in sync, so ``runnableExamples`` is usually preferred:
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.. code-block:: nim
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proc someproc*(): string =
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## Return "something"
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##
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## .. code-block::
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## echo someproc() # "something"
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result = "something" # single-hash comments do not produce documentation
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The ``.. code-block:: nim`` followed by a newline and an indentation instructs the
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``nim doc`` command to produce syntax-highlighted example code with the
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documentation (``.. code-block::`` is sufficient from inside a nim module).
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When forward declaration is used, the documentation should be included with the
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first appearance of the proc.
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.. code-block:: nim
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proc hello*(): string
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## Put documentation here
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proc nothing() = discard
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proc hello*(): string =
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## ignore this
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echo "hello"
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The preferred documentation style is to begin with a capital letter and use
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the imperative (command) form. That is, between:
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.. code-block:: nim
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proc hello*(): string =
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## Return "hello"
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result = "hello"
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or
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.. code-block:: nim
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proc hello*(): string =
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## says hello
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result = "hello"
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the first is preferred.
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Best practices
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=============
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Note: these are general guidelines, not hard rules; there are always exceptions.
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Code reviews can just point to a specific section here to save time and
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propagate best practices.
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.. _define_needs_prefix:
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New `defined(foo)` symbols need to be prefixed by the nimble package name, or
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by `nim` for symbols in nim sources (e.g. compiler, standard library). This is
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to avoid name conflicts across packages.
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.. code-block:: nim
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# if in nim sources
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when defined(allocStats): discard # bad, can cause conflicts
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when defined(nimAllocStats): discard # preferred
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# if in a pacakge `cligen`:
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when defined(debug): discard # bad, can cause conflicts
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when defined(cligenDebug): discard # preferred
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.. _noimplicitbool:
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Take advantage of no implicit bool conversion
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.. code-block:: nim
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doAssert isValid() == true
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doAssert isValid() # preferred
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.. _design_for_mcs:
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Design with method call syntax chaining in mind
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.. code-block:: nim
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proc foo(cond: bool, lines: seq[string]) # bad
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proc foo(lines: seq[string], cond: bool) # preferred
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# can be called as: `getLines().foo(false)`
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.. _avoid_quit:
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Use exceptions (including assert / doAssert) instead of ``quit``
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rationale: https://forum.nim-lang.org/t/4089
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.. code-block:: nim
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quit() # bad in almost all cases
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doAssert() # preferred
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.. _tests_use_doAssert:
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Use ``doAssert`` (or ``require``, etc), not ``assert`` in all tests so they'll
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be enabled even in release mode (except for tests in ``runnableExamples`` blocks
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which for which ``nim doc`` ignores ``-d:release``).
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.. code-block:: nim
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when isMainModule:
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assert foo() # bad
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doAssert foo() # preferred
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.. _delegate_printing:
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Delegate printing to caller: return ``string`` instead of calling ``echo``
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rationale: it's more flexible (e.g. allows caller to call custom printing,
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including prepending location info, writing to log files, etc).
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.. code-block:: nim
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proc foo() = echo "bar" # bad
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proc foo(): string = "bar" # preferred (usually)
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.. _use_Option:
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[Ongoing debate] Consider using Option instead of return bool + var argument,
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unless stack allocation is needed (e.g. for efficiency).
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.. code-block:: nim
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proc foo(a: var Bar): bool
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proc foo(): Option[Bar]
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.. _use_doAssert_not_echo:
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Tests (including in testament) should always prefer assertions over ``echo``,
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except when that's not possible. It's more precise, easier for readers and
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maintaners to where expected values refer to. See for example
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https://github.com/nim-lang/Nim/pull/9335 and https://forum.nim-lang.org/t/4089
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.. code-block:: nim
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echo foo() # adds a line for testament in `output:` block inside `discard`.
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doAssert foo() == [1, 2] # preferred, except when not possible to do so.
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The Git stuff
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=============
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General commit rules
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--------------------
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1. Important, critical bugfixes that have a tiny chance of breaking
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somebody's code should be backported to the latest stable release
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branch (currently 1.0.x). The commit message should contain ``[backport]``
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then.
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2. If you introduce changes which affect backwards compatibility,
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make breaking changes, or have PR which is tagged as ``[feature]``,
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the changes should be mentioned in `the changelog
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<https://github.com/nim-lang/Nim/blob/devel/changelog.md>`_.
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3. All changes introduced by the commit (diff lines) must be related to the
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subject of the commit.
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If you change something unrelated to the subject parts of the file, because
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your editor reformatted automatically the code or whatever different reason,
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this should be excluded from the commit.
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*Tip:* Never commit everything as is using ``git commit -a``, but review
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carefully your changes with ``git add -p``.
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4. Changes should not introduce any trailing whitespace.
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Always check your changes for whitespace errors using ``git diff --check``
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or add following ``pre-commit`` hook:
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.. code-block:: sh
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#!/bin/sh
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git diff --check --cached || exit $?
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5. Describe your commit and use your common sense.
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Example commit message:
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``Fixes #123; refs #124``
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indicates that issue ``#123`` is completely fixed (github may automatically
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close it when the PR is committed), wheres issue ``#124`` is referenced
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(e.g.: partially fixed) and won't close the issue when committed.
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6. Commits should be always be rebased against devel (so a fast forward
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merge can happen)
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e.g.: use ``git pull --rebase origin devel``. This is to avoid messing up
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git history.
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Exceptions should be very rare: when rebase gives too many conflicts, simply
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squash all commits using the script shown in
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https://github.com/nim-lang/Nim/pull/9356
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7. Do not mix pure formatting changes (e.g. whitespace changes, nimpretty) or
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automated changes (e.g. nimfix) with other code changes: these should be in
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separate commits (and the merge on github should not squash these into 1).
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Continuous Integration (CI)
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---------------------------
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1. Continuous Integration is by default run on every push in a PR; this clogs
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the CI pipeline and affects other PR's; if you don't need it (e.g. for WIP or
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documentation only changes), add ``[ci skip]`` to your commit message title.
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This convention is supported by `Appveyor
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<https://www.appveyor.com/docs/how-to/filtering-commits/#skip-directive-in-commit-message>`_
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and `Travis <https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/customizing-the-build/#skipping-a-build>`_.
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2. Consider enabling CI (travis and appveyor) in your own Nim fork, and
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waiting for CI to be green in that fork (fixing bugs as needed) before
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opening your PR in original Nim repo, so as to reduce CI congestion. Same
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applies for updates on a PR: you can test commits on a separate private
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branch before updating the main PR.
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Code reviews
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------------
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1. Whenever possible, use github's new 'Suggested change' in code reviews, which
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saves time explaining the change or applying it; see also
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https://forum.nim-lang.org/t/4317
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2. When reviewing large diffs that may involve code moving around, github's interface
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doesn't help much as it doesn't highlight moves. Instead you can use something
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like this, see visual results `here <https://github.com/nim-lang/Nim/pull/10431#issuecomment-456968196>`_:
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.. code-block:: sh
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git fetch origin pull/10431/head && git checkout FETCH_HEAD
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git diff --color-moved-ws=allow-indentation-change --color-moved=blocks HEAD^
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3. In addition, you can view github-like diffs locally to identify what was changed
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within a code block using `diff-highlight` or `diff-so-fancy`, e.g.:
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.. code-block:: sh
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# put this in ~/.gitconfig:
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[core]
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pager = "diff-so-fancy | less -R" # or: use: `diff-highlight`
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.. include:: docstyle.rst
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Evolving the stdlib
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===================
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As outlined in https://github.com/nim-lang/RFCs/issues/173 there are a couple
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of guidelines about what should go into the stdlib, what should be added and
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what eventually should be removed.
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What the compiler itself needs must be part of the stdlib
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---------------------------------------------------------
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Maybe in the future the compiler itself can depend on Nimble packages but for
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the time being, we strive to have zero dependencies in the compiler as the
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compiler is the root of the bootstrapping process and is also used to build
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Nimble.
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Vocabulary types must be part of the stdlib
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-------------------------------------------
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These are types most packages need to agree on for better interoperability,
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for example ``Option[T]``. This rule also covers the existing collections like
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``Table``, ``CountTable`` etc. "Sorted" containers based on a tree-like data
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structure are still missing and should be added.
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Time handling, especially the ``Time`` type are also covered by this rule.
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Existing, battle-tested modules stay
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------------------------------------
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Reason: There is no benefit in moving them around just to fullfill some design
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fashion as in "Nim's core MUST BE SMALL". If you don't like an existing module,
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don't import it. If a compilation target (e.g. JS) cannot support a module,
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document this limitation.
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This covers modules like ``os``, ``osproc``, ``strscans``, ``strutils``,
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``strformat``, etc.
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Syntactic helpers can start as experimental stdlib modules
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----------------------------------------------------------
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Reason: Generally speaking as external dependencies they are not exposed
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to enough users so that we can see if the shortcuts provide enough benefit
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or not. Many programmers avoid external dependencies, even moreso for
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"tiny syntactic improvements". However, this is only true for really good
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syntactic improvements that have the potential to clean up other parts of
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the Nim library substantially. If in doubt, new stdlib modules should start
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as external, successful Nimble packages.
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Other new stdlib modules do not start as stdlib modules
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-------------------------------------------------------
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As we strive for higher quality everywhere, it's easier to adopt existing,
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battle-tested modules eventually rather than creating modules from scratch.
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Little additions are acceptable
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-------------------------------
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As long as they are documented and tested well, adding little helpers
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to existing modules is acceptable. For two reasons:
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1. It makes Nim easier to learn and use in the long run.
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("Why does sequtils lack a ``countIt``?
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Because version 1.0 happens to have lacked it? Silly...")
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2. To encourage contributions. Contributors often start with PRs that
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add simple things and then they stay and also fix bugs. Nim is an
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open source project and lives from people's contributions and involvement.
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Newly introduced issues have to be balanced against motivating new people. We know where
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to find perfectly designed pieces of software that have no bugs -- these are the systems
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that nobody uses.
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