✨ We are very glad to see you in this section! ✨
Before you go ahead you should know that your contributions will be published under
the terms of the CC0
license.
Have you just found a spelling error? Need to fix indentation? Send us a pull request! ✨
You have discovered something cool, but don't know exactly if it suits the awesome definition? 👍 Submit a pull request to the inbox! We'll consider your addition and format it for you! 😃
💥 If you know something pretty cool, it suits the awesome definition, works for you and seems to be useful for the community please add it to the main list. In this case please ensure your pull request adheres to the following guidelines:
- Use one commit per addition (several commits per PR are OK).
- Add everything to the bottom of the relevant category.
- If required introduce new categories or improve the existing categorization.
- Use the following format:
- [title](link) - Distinguishing Description. <sup>[additional links]</sup>
- Name the libraries exactly how they are required from the Ruby program, not
after the Readme's title, e.g.
treat
, notTreat
, since you dorequire "treat"
. - Break down long lines, check your spelling, capitalization, and punctuation.
- Provide a useful titles and comments for your Pull Request (not
Changed readme.md
), mention the originator in the commit message if possible, e.g.Added the neuroevo lib by @giuse.
- Add the topic
rubydatascience
to your repository or open an issue and kindly ask the originator of the project to do so (if applicable for your submission).
Sometimes we will ask you to edit your Pull Request before it is included. This is normally due to spelling errors or because your PR didn't match these guidelines.
Here is a write up on how to change a Pull Request and the different ways you can do that.
👍 Thank you for your suggestions!