The Turing Way uses the emoji-key to recognise everyone who contributes to the project.
Emoji | Represents |
---|---|
💬 | Answering Questions (on gitter, GitHub, or in person) |
🐛 | Bug reports |
📝 | Blogposts |
💻 | Code |
📖 | Documentation and specification |
🎨 | Design |
💡 | Examples |
📋 | Event Organizers |
💵 | Financial Support |
🔍 | Funding/Grant Finders |
🤔 | Ideas & Planning |
🚇 | Infrastructure (Hosting, Build-Tools, etc) |
🔌 | Plugin/utility libraries |
👀 | Reviewed Pull Requests |
🔧 | Tools |
🌍 | Translation |
Tests | |
✅ | Tutorials |
📢 | Talks |
📹 | Videos |
Our barrier for entry to the list of contributors is very low. If you have contributed in any of the ways above then please ask one of the core team to use the all contributors bot 🤖 to add you to the list.
Please read the chapter on 'Acknowledging Contributors' in the community handbook that provides details on how we acknowledge different contributions made in this project.
Thank you for contributing! 💖🙌🎉
The Turing Way repository is archived on Zenodo at doi: 10.5281/zenodo.3233853.
Each release has its own doi, and there is a concept doi (listed above) which always renders to the latest release.
For example v0.0.1
is available at 10.5281/zenodo.3233854, v0.0.2
is available at 10.5281/zenodo.3233892 and so on.
We release a new version when a new chapter is merged into The Turing Way or if there is a substantial change to an existing chapter. Anyone who substantially contributed to the chapter is added to the list of authors.
Additionally, new authors may be added if they have substantially contributed to the running of the project. For example, adding in (or improving) documentation on how someone can contribute to The Turing Way, why they would, or how they can test the jupyter book, all count as core contributions warranting authorship.
Contributing small amounts over a long time, and thinking about the strategy for the project also count for authorship.
"Substantial" is a subjective term. As the project is quite small at the moment, the lead investigator Dr Kirstie Whitaker, will decide whether a contribution or collection of contributions is substantial enough to be given authorship. She can be contacted by email at [email protected].
Authorship is cumulative. If you have been added as an author on one release, you will stay as an author on all future releases.
Authors are listed in alphabetical order by last name.
The first author is always The Turing Way Community
.
Thank you for contributing substantially to the Turing Way! We could not do this without you! 🌺🌻🚀🌟