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@r74tech/docusaurus-plugin-panzoom

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A plugin to enable the panzoom component on SVG and other elements

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# Contributing to docusaurus-plugin-panzoom I appreciate your consideration to contribute to this project! This document is a guide to help make your contribution easier and more effective. ## Getting Started ### Prerequisites - [Node.js](https://nodejs.org) (v20 or later recommended) ### Installation 1. Clone the repository ```bash git clone https://github.com/r74tech/docusaurus-plugin-panzoom.git ``` 2. Move to the directory and install dependencies ```bash cd docusaurus-plugin-panzoom npm install ``` ### Development The main scripts used during development are: - `npm run build`: Builds the TypeScript code. - `npm run prepublishOnly`: Runs the build script before publishing. ## How to Contribute ### Reporting Issues If you find a bug or have a feature request, please open an issue on GitHub. 1. Check [the Issue Tracker](https://github.com/r74tech/docusaurus-plugin-panzoom/issues) for existing issues. 2. When requesting a new issue or feature, please provide as much detail as possible. ### Development 1. Check [the Issue Tracker](https://github.com/r74tech/docusaurus-plugin-panzoom/issues), make sure if there is anything relevant to the problem you are trying to solve. 2. Keep the repository you did folk up to date. ```bash git fetch upstream git rebase upstream/main ``` 3. Create a new branch. ```bash git switch -c feature/your-feature-name ``` 4. Make changes to the code and run tests to make sure everything is working properly. 5. Write a clear commit message following the Conventional Commits style. ### Commit Messages - Commit messages should concisely describe the changes you made. - Commits should be split into appropriate chunks, and we recommend using [the Conventional Commits](https://www.conventionalcommits.org/) style. Below are the available Conventional Commits types: - `feat`: a commit that adds new functionality (triggers a MINOR version bump). - `fix`: a commit that fixes a bug (triggers a PATCH version bump). - `docs`: a commit that adds or improves documentation. - `style`: changes that do not affect the meaning of the code. - `refactor`: a code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature. - `perf`: a commit that improves performance, without functional changes. - `test`: adding missing tests or correcting existing tests. - `build`: changes that affect the build system or external dependencies. - `ci`: changes to our CI configuration files and scripts. - `chore`: other changes that don't modify src or test files. - `revert`: reverts a previous commit. > [!NOTE] > If there is a single commit in the pull request, the commit message must be the same as a pull request title. Because the merge strategy in this repository is "Squash and merge". When you "Squash and merge" a pull request on a branch that has only one commit, the default commit message will be the commit message in that branch. > > cf. [About pull request merges - GitHub Docs](https://docs.github.com/en/pull-requests/collaborating-with-pull-requests/incorporating-changes-from-a-pull-request/about-pull-request-merges#merge-message-for-a-squash-merge) ### Breaking Changes For commits that introduce breaking changes, add an exclamation mark after the type and include a "BREAKING CHANGE:" section in the commit body: ``` feat!: completely revamp the API BREAKING CHANGE: The new API is not compatible with previous versions ``` ### Pull Requests 1. Write the title of pull request in the [the Conventional Commits](https://www.conventionalcommits.org/) style. 2. Create a pull request and include the following information: - Description of the change - Purpose of the change - Relevant issue number (if any) ## Automated Releases This project uses [semantic-release](https://github.com/semantic-release/semantic-release) for automated version management and package publishing. The release process is triggered automatically when changes are merged into the main branch. - `fix:` commits trigger a PATCH version bump (e.g., 1.0.0 → 1.0.1) - `feat:` commits trigger a MINOR version bump (e.g., 1.0.0 → 1.1.0) - Commits with `BREAKING CHANGE:` trigger a MAJOR version bump (e.g., 1.0.0 → 2.0.0) ## License This project is based on [MIT License](/LICENSE).