mirror of
https://github.com/ethereum/solidity
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201 lines
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Markdown
201 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
# PR Review Checklist
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The Solidity compiler is a critical piece of infrastructure in the Ethereum ecosystem.
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For this reason, our review process is quite strict and all PRs have to fulfill certain quality
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expectations and guidelines.
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The list below is meant to reduce the workload on the core team by helping contributors self-identify
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and solve common issues before they are pointed out in the review.
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It is also meant to serve as a final checklist for reviewers to go through before approving a PR.
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## Before You Submit a PR
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- [ ] **Do you have any other open PRs?**
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Work on a PR is not done until it is merged or closed.
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Our reviewing capacity is limited, so we require that external contributors work on **no more than one PR at a time**.
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- If your PR is not getting reviewed, feel free to bring it to our attention on the [#solidity-dev](https://gitter.im/ethereum/solidity-dev) channel.
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- Unless they were requested, we are going to close any excess PRs, leaving only the earliest one open.
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You may reopen them, one at a time, when your current PR is done.
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- [ ] **Is the issue ready to be worked on?**
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- If the issue does not have a desirability label (`nice to have`, `should have`,
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`must have eventually`, `must have`, `roadmap`) we have not yet decided whether to implement it.
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- If the issue has the `needs design` label, we have not yet decided how it should be implemented.
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- `good first issue candidate` means that the issue will potentially be a `good first issue`
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eventually but at the moment it is not yet ready to be worked on.
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- [ ] **Is this a breaking change?** Breaking changes should be based on the `breaking` branch rather than on the `develop` branch.
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- [ ] **Does the PR actually address the issue?**
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- [ ] Mention the issue number in the PR description.
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If the PR solves it completely, use the `Fixes #<issue number>` form so that Github will close the issue automatically.
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- [ ] Do not include the issue number in the PR title, branch name or commit description.
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- [ ] When submitting a PR from a fork **create a branch and give it a descriptive name.**
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E.g. `fix-array-abi-encoding-bug`.
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Do not submit PRs directly from the `develop` branch of your fork since it makes rebasing and fetching new changes harder.
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- [ ] **Does the PR depend on other PRs?**
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- [ ] If the PR has dependencies, mention them in bold in the description.
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- [ ] Avoid basing PRs from forks on branches other than `develop` or `breaking` because
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GitHub closes them when the base branch gets merged.
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Do this only for PRs created directly in the main repo.
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- [ ] **Does the PR update test expectations to match the modified code?** If not, your PR will not pass some of the `_soltest_`, jobs in CI.
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In many cases the expectations can be updated automatically:
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- `cmdlineTests.sh --update` for command-line tests.
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- `isoltest --enforce-gas-cost --accept-updates` for soltest-based tests.
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- If your PR affects gas costs, an extra run of `isoltest --enforce-gas-cost --optimize --accept-updates` is needed to update gas expectations with optimizer enabled.
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- Review updated files before committing them.
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**Are expectations correct and do updated tests still serve their purpose?**
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## Abandoned PRs
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- [ ] **Is the submitter still responsive?**
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- If the PR had no activity from the submitter in the last 2 weeks (despite receiving reviews and our prompts) we consider it abandoned.
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- [ ] **Is the abandoned PR easy to finish or relevant?**
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- Apply the `takeover` label if the PR can be finished without significant effort or is something that actually needs to be done right now.
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Otherwise close it.
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It can still be taken over later or reopened by the submitter but until then we should not be getting sidetracked by it.
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## Light Review
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Before an in-depth review, it is recommended to give new PRs a quick, superficial review, which
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is not meant to provide complete and detailed feedback, but instead give the submitter a rough idea
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if the PR is even on the right track and let them solve the obvious problems on their own.
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Light review should focus on the following three areas:
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- [ ] **Are there any obvious mistakes?** Style issues, bad practices, easy to identify bugs, etc.
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- [ ] **Is there anything missing?** Tests (of the right kind), documentation, etc. Does it address the whole issue?
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- [ ] **Is it the right solution?** Are there better ways to do this? Is the change even necessary?
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If the answers above are "Yes, Yes, No", thank the contributor for their effort and **close the PR**.
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## Coding Style and Good Practices
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- [ ] Does the PR follow our [coding style](CODING_STYLE.md)?
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### Reliability
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- [ ] **Use assertions liberally.** If you are certain your assumption will not be broken, prove it with `solAssert()`.
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- [ ] **Validate inputs and handle errors**. Note that assertions are **not** validation.
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### Readability
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- [ ] **Choose good names.**
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- [ ] Is the name straightforward to understand?
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Do you feel the need to jump back to the definition and remind yourself what it was whenever you see it?
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- [ ] Is the name unambiguous in the context where it is used?
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- [ ] Avoid abbreviations.
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- [ ] **Source files, classes and public functions should have docstrings.**
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- [ ] **Avoid code duplication.** But not fanatically. Minimal amounts of duplication are acceptable if it aids readability.
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- [ ] **Do not leave dead or commented-out code behind.** You can still see old code in history.
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If you really have a good reason to do it, always leave a comment explaining what it is and why it is there.
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- [ ] **Mark hacks as such.** If you have to leave behind a temporary workaround, make
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sure to include a comment that explains why and in what circumstances it can be removed.
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Preferably link to an issue you reported upstream.
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- [ ] **Avoid obvious comments.**
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- [ ] **Do include comments when the reader may need extra context to understand the code.**
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### Commits and PRs
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- [ ] **Avoid hiding functional changes inside refactors.**
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E.g. when fixing a small bug, or changing user-visible behavior, put the change in a separate commit.
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Do not mix it with another change that renames things or reformats the code around, making the fix itself hard to identify.
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- [ ] **Whenever possible, split off refactors or unrelated changes into separate PRs.**
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Smaller PRs are easier and quicker to review.
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Splitting off refactors helps focus on the main point of the PR.
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### Common Pitfalls
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The following points are all covered by the coding style but come up so often that it is worth singling them out here:
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- [ ] **Always initialize value types in the definition,** even if you are sure you will assign them later.
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- [ ] **Use "east const" style.** I.e. `T const*`, not `const T *`.
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- [ ] **Keep indentation consistent.** See our [`.editorconfig`](.editorconfig).
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- [ ] Tabs for C++. But use them for indentation only. Any whitespace later on the line must consist of spaces.
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- [ ] 4 spaces for most other file types.
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- [ ] **Use `auto` sparingly.** Only use it when the actual type is very long and complicated or when it is
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already used elsewhere in the same expression.
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- [ ] **Indent braces and parentheses in a way that makes nesting clear.**
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- [ ] **Use `using namespace` only in `.cpp` files.** Use it for `std` and our own modules.
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Avoid unnecessary `std::` prefix in `.cpp` files (except for `std::move`).
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- [ ] **Use range-based loops and destructuring.**
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- [ ] **Include any headers you use directly,** even if they are implicitly included through other headers.
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## Documentation
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- [ ] **Does the PR update relevant documentation?**
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### Documentation Style and Good Practices
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- [ ] **Use double backticks in RST (``` ``x`` ```). Prefer single backticks in Markdown (`` `x` ``),**
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but note that double backticks are valid too and we use them in some cases for legacy reasons.
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- [ ] **Always start a new sentence on a new line.**
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This way you do not have to rewrap the surrounding text when you rewrite the sentence.
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This also makes changes actually easier to spot in the diff.
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## Testing
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### What to Test
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- [ ] **Is newly added code adequately covered by tests?** Have you considered all the important corner cases?
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- If it is a bugfix:
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- [ ] **The PR must include tests that reproduce the bug.**
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- [ ] **Are there gaps in test coverage of the buggy feature?** Fill them by adding more tests.
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- [ ] **Try to break it.** Can you of any similar features that could also be buggy?
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Play with the repro and include prominent variants as separate test cases, even if they don't trigger a bug.
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- [ ] **Positive cases (code that compiles) should have a semantic test.**
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- [ ] **Negative cases (code with compilation errors) should have a syntax test.**
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- [ ] **Avoid mixing positive and negative cases in the same syntax test.**
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If the test produces an error, we stop at the analysis stage and we will not detect
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problems that only occur in code generation, optimizer or assembler.
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- [ ] If you have to do it, at least mark positive cases inside the file with a short comment.
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- This way, when the test is updated, it is easier to verify that these cases still do not trigger an error.
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- [ ] New syntax: **does it have an [`ASTJSON`](test/libsolidity/ASTJSON/) test?**
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- [ ] New CLI or StandardJSON option:
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- [ ] **Does it have a [command-line test](test/cmdlineTests/)?**
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- [ ] **Is the option listed for every input mode in [`CommandLineParser` tests](test/solc/CommandLineParser.cpp)?**
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- [ ] **Did you consider interactions with other language features?**
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- [ ] Are all types covered? Structs? Enums? Contracts/libraries/interfaces? User-defined value types?
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Value types: integers, fixed bytes, `address`, `address payable`, `bool`? Function pointers?
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Static and dynamic arrays? `string` and `bytes`? Mappings?
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Values of types that cannot be named: literals, tuples, array slices, storage references?
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- [ ] If it accepts a function, does it also accept an event or an error? These have function types but are not functions.
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- [ ] If it affects free functions, what about internal library functions?
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- [ ] Bound library functions? Functions bound with `using for`?
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- [ ] Possible combinations of `storage`, `memory`, `calldata`, `immutable`, `constant`?
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Remember that internal functions can take `storage` arguments.
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- [ ] Does it work at construction time as well? What if you store it at construction time and read after deployment?
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- [ ] What about importing it from a different module or inheriting it?
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- [ ] Have you tested it with the ternary operator?
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### Test Style and Good Practices
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- [ ] **Make test case file names long and specific enough** so that it is easy to guess what is inside.
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When checking if we have the case already covered the name is usually the only clue we see.
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- [ ] Place them in the right subdirectory.
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- [ ] **Avoid simply appending numbers to the name to distinguish similar cases.**
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Coming up with good names is hard but figuring out if any of hundreds of tests with names that
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match your search actually fits your case is even harder.
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- [ ] **Do not include version pragma and the SPDX comment in semantic and syntax test cases**.
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In other test types include them if necessary to suppress warnings.
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- [ ] **If you have to use a version pragma, avoid hard-coding version.** Use `pragma solidity *`.
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- [ ] **When writing StandardJSON command-line tests, use `urls` instead of `content`** and put
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the Solidity or Yul code in a separate file.
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## Compiler-specific
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- [ ] **Are error messages sensible and understandable to users?**
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- [ ] **Are error codes consistent?**
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- [ ] Avoid randomly changing or reassigning error codes.
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- [ ] Avoid defining separate codes for trivial variants of the same issue.
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Make it easy for tools to consistently refer to the same error with the same code.
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- [ ] **Error messages should end with a full stop.**
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- [ ] **Prefer Ranges v3 to Boost where possible.**
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## Take a Step Back
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- [ ] **Do you fully understand what the PR does and why?**
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- [ ] **Are you confident that the code works and does not break unrelated functionality?**
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- [ ] **Is this a reasonable way to achieve the goal stated in the issue?**
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- [ ] **Is the code simple?** Does the PR achieve its objective at the cost of significant
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complexity that may be a source of future bugs?
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- [ ] **Is the code efficient?** Does the PR introduce any major performance bottlenecks?
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- [ ] **Does the PR introduce any breaking changes beyond what was agreed in the issue?**
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## Final Checks Before Merging
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- [ ] **Is the PR rebased on top of the `develop` branch** (or `breaking` if it is a breaking change)?
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- [ ] **Did all CI checks pass?**
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- Note that we have a few jobs that tend to randomly fail due to outside factors, especially external tests (with `_ext_` in the name).
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If these fail, rebase on latest `develop` (or `breaking`) and try rerunning them.
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Note also that not all of these checks are required for the PR to be merged.
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- [ ] If the change is visible to users, **does the PR have a [changelog](Changelog.md) entry?**
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- [ ] Is the changelog entry in the right section?
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Make sure to move it up if there was a release recently.
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- [ ] **Is commit history simple and understandable?**
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- [ ] Each commit should be a self-contained, logical step leading the goal of the PR, without going back and forth.
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In particular, review fixups should be squashed into the commits they fix.
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- [ ] Do not include any merge commits in your branch. Please use rebase to keep up to date with the base branch.
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- [ ] **Is the PR properly labeled?**
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- Use `external contribution` label to mark PRs not coming from the core team.
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- If the PR depends on other PRs, use `has dependencies` and set the base branch accordingly.
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- Labels like `documentation` or `optimizer` are helpful for filtering PRs.
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