Setting up scikit-plots for development#
Template
Template for further usage, template belong to matplotlib.
To set up scikit-plots for development follow these steps:
Fork the scikit-plots repository#
scikit-plots is hosted at scikit-plots/scikit-plots.git. If you plan on solving issues or submitting pull requests to the main scikit-plots repository, you should first fork this repository by clicking the Fork button near the top of the project repository page.
This creates a copy of the code under your account on the GitHub server. See the GitHub documentation for more details.
Retrieve the latest version of the code#
Now that your fork of the repository lives under your GitHub username, you can
retrieve the most recent version of the source code with one of the following
commands (replace <your-username>
with your GitHub username):
git clone https://github.com/<your-username>/scikit-plots.git
git clone git@github.com:<your-username>/scikit-plots.git
This requires you to setup an SSH key in advance, but saves you from typing your password at every connection.
This will place the sources in a directory scikit-plots
below your
current working directory and set the remote name origin
to point to your
fork. Change into this directory before continuing:
cd scikit-plots
Now set the remote name upstream
to point to the scikit-plots main repository:
git remote add upstream https://github.com/scikit-plots/scikit-plots.git
git remote add upstream git@github.com:scikit-plots/scikit-plots.git
You can now use upstream
to retrieve the most current snapshot of the source
code, as described in Development workflow.
Additional git
and GitHub
resources#
For more information on git
and GitHub
, see:
Create a dedicated environment#
You should set up a dedicated environment to decouple your scikit-plots development from other Python and scikit-plots installations on your system.
We recommend using one of the following options for a dedicated development environment because these options are configured to install the Python dependencies as part of their setup.
Create a new venv environment with
python -m venv <file folder location>
and activate it with one of the following
source <file folder location>/bin/activate # Linux/macOS
<file folder location>\Scripts\activate.bat # Windows cmd.exe
<file folder location>\Scripts\Activate.ps1 # Windows PowerShell
On some systems, you may need to type python3
instead of python
.
For a discussion of the technical reasons, see PEP-394.
Install the Python dependencies with
pip install -r requirements/dev/dev-requirements.txt
Remember to activate the environment whenever you start working on scikit-plots!
Create a new conda environment and install the Python dependencies with
conda env create -f environment.yml
You can use mamba
instead of conda
in the above command if
you have mamba installed.
Activate the environment using
conda activate mpl-dev
Remember to activate the environment whenever you start working on scikit-plots!
GitHub Codespaces is a cloud-based in-browser development environment that comes with the appropriate setup to contribute to scikit-plots.
Open codespaces on your fork by clicking on the green
Code
button on the GitHub web interface and selecting theCodespaces
tab.Next, click on “Open codespaces on <your branch name>”. You will be able to change branches later, so you can select the default
main
branch.After the codespace is created, you will be taken to a new browser tab where you can use the terminal to activate a pre-defined conda environment called
mpl-dev
:conda activate mpl-dev
Remember to activate the mpl-dev environment whenever you start working on scikit-plots.
If you need to open a GUI window with scikit-plots output on Codespaces, our configuration includes a light-weight Fluxbox-based desktop. You can use it by connecting to this desktop via your web browser. To do this:
Press
F1
orCtrl/Cmd+Shift+P
and selectPorts: Focus on Ports View
in the VSCode session to bring it into focus. Open the ports view in your tool, select thenoVNC
port, and click the Globe icon.In the browser that appears, click the Connect button and enter the desktop password (
vscode
by default).
Check the GitHub instructions for more details on connecting to the desktop.
If you also built the documentation pages, you can view them using Codespaces.
Use the “Extensions” icon in the activity bar to install the “Live Server”
extension. Locate the doc/build/html
folder in the Explorer, right click
the file you want to open and select “Open with Live Server.”
Install external dependencies#
Python dependencies were installed as part of setting up the environment. Additionally, the following non-Python dependencies must also be installed locally:
For a full list of dependencies, see Dependencies. External dependencies do not need to be installed when working in codespaces.
Install scikit-plots in editable mode#
Install scikit-plots in editable mode from the scikit-plots
directory using the
command
python -m pip install --verbose --no-build-isolation --editable ".[dev]"
The ‘editable/develop mode’ builds everything and places links in your Python environment
so that Python will be able to import scikit-plots from your development source directory.
This allows you to import your modified version of scikit-plots without having to
re-install after changing a .py
or compiled extension file.
When working on a branch that does not have Meson enabled, meaning it does not have PR #26621 in its history (log), you will have to reinstall from source each time you change any compiled extension code.
If the installation is not working, please consult the troubleshooting guide. If the guide does not offer a solution, please reach out via chat or open an issue.
Build options#
If you are working heavily with files that need to be compiled, you may want to
inspect the compilation log. This can be enabled by setting the environment
variable MESONPY_EDITABLE_VERBOSE
or by setting the editable-verbose
config during installation
python -m pip install --no-build-isolation --config-settings=editable-verbose=true --editable .
For more information on installation and other configuration options, see the Meson Python editable installs guide.
For a list of the other environment variables you can set before install, see Environment variables.
Verify the Installation#
Run the following command to make sure you have correctly installed scikit-plots in editable mode. The command should be run when the virtual environment is activated:
python -c "import scikitplot; print(scikitplot.__file__)"
This command should return : <scikit-plots_local_repo>\scikitplot\__init__.py
We encourage you to run tests and build docs to verify that the code installed correctly and that the docs build cleanly, so that when you make code or document related changes you are aware of the existing issues beforehand.
Run test cases to verify installation Testing
Verify documentation build Write documentation
Install pre-commit hooks#
pre-commit hooks save time in the review process by identifying issues with the code before a pull request is formally opened. Most hooks can also aide in fixing the errors, and the checks should have corresponding development workflow and pull request guidelines. Hooks are configured in .pre-commit-config.yaml and include checks for spelling and formatting, flake 8 conformity, accidentally committed files, import order, and incorrect branching.
Install pre-commit hooks
python -m pip install pre-commit
pre-commit install
Hooks are run automatically after the git commit
stage of the
editing workflow. When a hook has found and fixed an error in a
file, that file must be staged and committed again.
Hooks can also be run manually. All the hooks can be run, in order as
listed in .pre-commit-config.yaml
, against the full codebase with
pre-commit run --all-files
To run a particular hook manually, run pre-commit run
with the hook id
pre-commit run <hook id> --all-files
Please note that the mypy
pre-commit hook cannot check the Type hints
for new functions; instead the stubs for new functions are checked using the
stubtest
CI check and can be checked locally using
tox -e stubtest
.