4.1 KiB
Contributing
Due to the precarious nature of the Open Specifications Promise, it is very important to ensure code is cleanroom. Contribution Notes
File organization (click to show)
At a high level, the final script is a concatenation of the individual files in
the bits
folder. Running make
should reproduce the final output on all
platforms. The README is similarly split into bits in the docbits
folder.
Folders:
folder | contents |
---|---|
bits |
raw source files that make up the final script |
docbits |
raw markdown files that make up README.md |
bin |
server-side bin scripts (xlsx.njs ) |
dist |
dist files for web browsers and nonstandard JS environments |
demos |
demo projects for platforms like ExtendScript and Webpack |
tests |
browser tests (run make ctest to rebuild) |
types |
typescript definitions and tests |
misc |
miscellaneous supporting scripts |
test_files |
test files (pulled from the test files repository) |
After cloning the repo, running make help
will display a list of commands.
OSX/Linux
(click to show)
The xlsx.js
file is constructed from the files in the bits
subdirectory. The
build script (run make
) will concatenate the individual bits to produce the
script. Before submitting a contribution, ensure that running make will produce
the xlsx.js
file exactly. The simplest way to test is to add the script:
$ git add xlsx.js
$ make clean
$ make
$ git diff xlsx.js
To produce the dist files, run make dist
. The dist files are updated in each
version release and should not be committed between versions.
Windows
(click to show)
The included make.cmd
script will build xlsx.js
from the bits
directory.
Building is as simple as:
> make
To prepare development environment:
> make init
The full list of commands available in Windows are displayed in make help
:
make init -- install deps and global modules
make lint -- run eslint linter
make test -- run mocha test suite
make misc -- run smaller test suite
make book -- rebuild README and summary
make help -- display this message
As explained in Test Files, on Windows the release ZIP file must be downloaded and extracted. If Bash on Windows is available, it is possible to run the OSX/Linux workflow. The following steps prepares the environment:
# Install support programs for the build and test commands
sudo apt-get install make git subversion mercurial
# Install nodejs and NPM within the WSL
wget -qO- https://deb.nodesource.com/setup_8.x | sudo bash
sudo apt-get install nodejs
# Install dev dependencies
sudo npm install -g mocha voc blanket xlsjs
Tests
(click to show)
The test_misc
target (make test_misc
on Linux/OSX / make misc
on Windows)
runs the targeted feature tests. It should take 5-10 seconds to perform feature
tests without testing against the entire test battery. New features should be
accompanied with tests for the relevant file formats and features.
For tests involving the read side, an appropriate feature test would involve reading an existing file and checking the resulting workbook object. If a parameter is involved, files should be read with different values to verify that the feature is working as expected.
For tests involving a new write feature which can already be parsed, appropriate feature tests would involve writing a workbook with the feature and then opening and verifying that the feature is preserved.
For tests involving a new write feature without an existing read ability, please
add a feature test to the kitchen sink tests/write.js
.