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Contributing to the C++ Core Guidelines
"Within C++ is a smaller, simpler, safer language struggling to get out." -- Bjarne Stroustrup
The C++ Core Guidelines are a collaborative effort led by Bjarne Stroustrup, much like the C++ language itself. They are the result of many person-years of discussion and design across a number of organizations. Their design encourages general applicability and broad adoption but they can be freely copied and modified to meet your organization's needs.
We encourage contributions to the C++ Core Guidelines in a number of ways:
- Individual feedback Are you a developer who is passionate about your code? Join the discussion in Issues. We want to know which rules resonate with you and which don't. Were any rules inordinately difficult to apply? Does your compiler vendor's Guideline Support Library (e.g., Microsoft's implementation of the GSL) suit your needs in adopting these guidelines?
- Organizational adoption While the guidelines are designed to be broadly adoptable they are also intended to be modified to fit your organization's particular needs. We encourage your organization to fork this repo and create your own copy of these guidelines with changes that reflect your needs. We suggest that you make it clear in the title of your guidelines that these are your organization's fork of the guidelines and that you provide a link back to the original set of guidelines. And if any of your local changes are appropriate to pull back into the original guidelines, please open an Issue which can lead to a pull request.
- Maintain the Guidelines The C++ Core Guidelines were created from a wealth of knowledge spread across a number of organizations worldwide. If you or your organization is passionate about helping to create the guidelines consider becoming an editor or maintainer. If you're a C++ expert who is serious about participating please [email coreguidelines@isocpp.org](mailto:coreguidelines@isocpp.org?subject=Maintain the C++ Code Guidelines).
Contributor License Agreement
By contributing content to the C++ Core Guidelines (i.e., submitting a pull request for inclusion in this repository) you agree with the Standard C++ Foundation Terms of Use, especially all of the terms specified regarding Copyright and Patents.
- You warrant that your material is original, or you have the right to contribute it.
- With respect to the material that you own, you grant a worldwide non-exclusive irrevocable transferable royalty-free license to your contributed material to Standard C++ Foundation to display, reproduce, perform, distribute and create derivative works of that material for commercial or non-commercial use. With respect to any other material you contribute, such material must be under a license sufficient to allow Standard C++ Foundation to display, reproduce, perform, distribute and create derivative works of that material for commercial or non-commercial use.
- You agree that, if your contributed material is subsequently reflected in the ISO/IEC C++ standard in any form, it will be subject to all ISO/IEC JTC 1 policies including copyrights, patents, and procedures; please direct any questions about these policies to the ISO Central Secretariat.
Pull requests
We welcome pull requests for scoped changes to the guidelines--bug fixes in examples, clarifying ambiguous text, etc. Significant changes should first be discussed in the Issues and the Issue number must be included in the pull request. For guideline-related changes, please specify the rule number in your Issue and/or Pull Request.
Changes should be made in a child commit of a recent commit in the master branch. If you are making many small changes, please create separate PRs to minimize merge issues.
Document Style Guidelines
Documents in this repository are written in an unspecific flavor of Markdown, which leaves some ambiguity for formatting text. We ask that pull requests maintain the following style guidelines, though we are aware that the document may not already be consistent.
Indentation
Code and nested text should use multiples of 4 spaces of indentation, and no tab characters, like so:
void func(const int x)
{
std::cout << x << std::endl;
}
Code Blocks
Please use 4-space indentation to trigger code parsing, rather than fenced code blocks or any other style, like so:
This is some document text, with an example below:
void func()
{
std::cout << "This is code." << std::endl;
}
Miscellaneous
To avoid line-ending issues, please set autocrlf = input
and whitespace = cr-at-eol
in your git configuration.