For info on contributing things other than code, such as translations, decks and add-ons, please see https://docs.ankiweb.net/contrib
If you'd like to contribute but don't know what to work on, please take a look at the issues tab of the Anki repo on GitHub.
Before starting work on larger changes, especially ones that aren't listed on the issue tracker, please reach out on the forums before you begin work, so we can let you know whether they're likely to be accepted or not. When you spent a bunch of time on a PR that ends up getting rejected, it's no fun for either you or us.
Please avoid PRs that focus on refactoring. Every PR has a cost to review, and a chance of introducing accidental regressions, and often these costs are not worth it for slightly more elegant code.
That's not to say there's no value in refactoring. But such changes are usually better done in a PR that happens to be working in the same area - for example, making small changes to the code as part of fixing a bug, or a larger refactor when introducing a new feature.
Most of Anki's Python code now has type hints, which improve code completion, and make it easier to discover errors during development. When adding new code, please make sure you add type hints as well, or the tests will fail.
Qt's stubs are not perfect, so you may sometimes need to use cast(), or silence a type error. When connecting signals, there's a qconnect() helper in aqt.utils that can be used to work around the type warnings without obscuring other errors such as a mistyped variable.
In cases where you have two modules that reference each other, you can fix the import cycle by using fully qualified names in the types, and enabling annotations. For example, instead of
from aqt.browser import Browser
def myfunc(b: Browser) -> None:
pass
use the following instead:
from __future__ import annotations
import aqt
def myfunc(b: aqt.browser.Browser) -> None:
pass
If you're writing an add-on and would like to extend a function that doesn't currently have a hook, a pull request that adds the required hooks would be welcome. If you could mention your use case in the pull request, that would be appreciated.
The hooks try to follow one of two formats:
[subject] [verb] - eg, note_type_added, card_will_render
[module] [verb] [subject] - eg, browser_did_change_row, editor_did_update_tags
The qt code tends to use the second form, as the hooks tend to focus on particular screens. The pylib code tends to use the first form, as the focus is usually subjects like cards, notes, etc.
Using "did change" instead of the past tense "changed" can seem awkward, but makes it consistent with "will", and is similar to the naming style used in iOS's libraries.
In most cases, hooks are better added in the GUI code than in pylib.
The hook code is automatically generated using the definitions in pylib/tools/genhooks.py and qt/tools/genhooks_gui.py. Adding a new definition in one of those files will update the generated files.
If you want to change an existing hook to, for example, receive an additional
argument, you must leave the existing hook unchanged to preserve backwards
compatibility. Create a new definition for your hook with a similar name and
include the properties replaces="name_of_old_hook"
and
replaced_hook_args=["..."]
in the definition of the new hook. If the old hook
has a legacy hook, you must not add the legacy hook to the definition of the
new hook.
For information on adding new translatable strings to Anki, please see https://translating.ankiweb.net/anki/developers
Please make sure 'ninja check' completes successfully before submitting code. You can do this automatically by adding the following into .git/hooks/pre-commit or .git/hooks/pre-push and making it executable.
#!/bin/bash
./ninja check
You may want to explicitly set PATH to your normal shell PATH in that script, as pre-commit does not use a login shell, and if your path differs Bazel will end up recompiling things unnecessarily.
If your change is non-trivial and not covered by the existing unit tests, please consider adding a unit test at the same time.
Please use standard Python snake_case variable names and functions in newly introduced code. Because add-ons often rely on existing function names, if renaming an existing function, please add a legacy alias to the old function.
A patch or pull request should be the minimum necessary to address one issue. Please don't make a pull request for a bunch of unrelated changes, as they are difficult to review and will be rejected - split them up into separate requests instead.
Please add yourself to the CONTRIBUTORS file in your first pull request.