mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
408 lines
20 KiB
Markdown
408 lines
20 KiB
Markdown
# Reviewing Zulip code
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Code review is a key part of how Zulip does development. It's an essential
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aspect of our process to build a high-quality product with a maintainable
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codebase. See the [pull request review process](../contributing/review-process.md)
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guide for a detailed overview of Zulip's PR review process.
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## Principles of code review
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Zulip has an active contributor community, and just a small handful
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of maintainers who can do the final rounds of code review. As such, we would
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love for contributors to help each other with making pull requests that are not
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only correct, but easy to review. Doing so ensures that PRs can be finalized and
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merged more quickly, and accelerates the pace of progress for the entire
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project.
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If you're new to open source, this may be the first time you do a code review of
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anyone's changes! We have therefore written this step-by-step guide to be
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accessible to all Zulip contributors.
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### Reviewing your own code
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One of the best ways to improve the quality of your own work as a software
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engineer is to do a code review of your own work before submitting it to others for
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review. We thus strongly encourage you to get into the habit of reviewing you
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own code. You can often find things you missed by taking a step back to look
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over your work before asking others to do so, and this guide will walk you
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through the process. Catching mistakes yourself will help your PRs be merged
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faster, and folks will appreciate the quality and professionalism of your
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work.
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### Reviewing other contributors' code
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Doing code reviews is a valuable contribution to the Zulip project.
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It's also an important skill to develop for participating in
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open-source projects and working in the industry in general. If
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you're contributing to Zulip and have been working in our code for a
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little while, we would love for you to start doing code reviews!
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Anyone can do a code review -- you don't have to have a ton of experience, and
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you don't have to have the power to ultimately merge the PR. The sections below
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offer accessible, step-by-step guidance for how to go about reviewing Zulip PRs.
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For students participating in Google Summer of Code or a similar
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program, we expect you to spend a chunk of your time each week (after
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the first couple of weeks as you're getting going) doing code reviews.
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## How to review code
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Whether you are reviewing your own code or somebody else's, this section
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describes how to go about it.
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If you are reviewing somebody else's code, you will likely need to first fetch
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it so that you can play around with the new functionality. If you're working in
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the Zulip server codebase, use our [Git tool][git-tool]
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`tools/fetch-rebase-pull-request` to check out a pull request locally and rebase
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it onto `main`.
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### Code review checklist
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The following review steps apply to the majority of PRs.
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**Think about the issue:**
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1. Start by **rereading the issue** the PR is intended to solve. Are you
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confident that you **understand everything the issue is asking for**? If not,
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try exploring the relevant parts of the Zulip app and reading any linked
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discussions on the [development community server][czo] to see if the
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additional context helps. If any part is still confusing, post a GitHub
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comment or a message on the [development community server][czo] explaining
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precisely what points you find confusing.
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2. Now that you're confident that you understand the issue, **does the PR
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address all the points described in the issue**? If not, is it easy to tell
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without reading the code which points are not addressed and why? Here is a
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handful of good ways for the author to communicate why the issue as written
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might not be fully solved by the PR:
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- The issue explicitly notes that it's fine for some parts to be completed
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separately, and the PR clearly indicates which parts are solved.
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- After discussion of initial prototypes (in GitHub comments or on the
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[development community server][czo]), it was decided to change some part of
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the specification, and the PR notes this.
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- The author explains why the PR is a better way to solve the issue than what
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was described.
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- The solution changed because of changes in the project or application since
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the issue was written, and the author explains the adjustments that were
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made.
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**Think about the code:**
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1. Make sure the PR uses **clear function, argument, variable, and test names.**
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Every new piece of Zulip code will be read many times by other developers, and
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future developers will `grep` for relevant terms when researching a problem, so
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it's important that variable names communicate clearly the purpose of each
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piece of the codebase.
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1. Make sure the PR **avoids duplicated code.** Code duplication is a huge
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source of bugs in large projects and makes the codebase difficult to
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understand, so we avoid significant code duplication wherever possible.
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Sometimes avoiding code duplication involves some refactoring of existing
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code; if so, that should usually be done as its own series of commits (not
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squashed into other changes or left as a thing to do later). That series of
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commits can be in the same pull request as the feature that they support, and
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we recommend ordering the history of commits so that the refactoring comes
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_before_ the feature. That way, it's easy to merge the refactoring (and
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minimize risk of merge conflicts) if there are still user experience issues
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under discussion for the feature itself.
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1. **Good comments** help. It's often worth thinking about whether explanation
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in a commit message or pull request discussion should be included in
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a comment, `/docs`, or other documentation. But it's better yet if
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verbose explanation isn't needed. We prefer writing code that is
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readable without explanation over a heavily commented codebase using
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lots of clever tricks.
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1. Make sure the PR follows Zulip's **coding style**. See the Zulip [coding
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style documentation][code-style] for details. Our goal is to have as much of
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this as possible verified via the linters and tests, but there will always be
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unusual forms of Python/JavaScript style that our tools don't check for.
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1. If you can, step back and think about the **technical design**. There are a
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lot of considerations here: security, migration paths/backwards compatibility,
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cost of new dependencies, interactions with features, speed of performance,
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API changes. Security is especially important and worth thinking about
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carefully with any changes to security-sensitive code like views.
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**Think about testing:**
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1. **The CI build tests need to pass.** One can investigate
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any failures and figure out what to fix by clicking on a red X next
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to the commit hash or the Detail links on a pull request. (Example:
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in [#17584](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/pull/17584),
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click the red X before `49b10a3` to see the build jobs
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for that commit. You can see that there are 7 build jobs in total.
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All the 7 jobs run in GitHub Actions. You can see what caused
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the job to fail by clicking on the failed job. This will open
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up a page in the CI that has more details on why the job failed.
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For example [this](https://github.com/zulip/zulip/runs/2092955762)
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is the page of the "Ubuntu 20.04 (Python 3.8, backend + frontend)" job.
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See our docs on [continuous integration](../testing/continuous-integration.md)
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to learn more.
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2. Make sure **the code is well-tested**; see below for details. The PR should
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summarize any [manual testing](#manual-testing) that was done to validate
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that the feature is working as expected.
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**Think about the commits:**
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1. Does the PR follow the principle that “**Each commit is a minimal coherent
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idea**”? See the [commit discipline guide][commit-discipline] to learn more
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about commit structure in Zulip.
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2. Does each commit have a **clear commit message**? Check for content, format,
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spelling and grammar. See the [Zulip commit discipline][commit-messages]
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documentation for details on what we look for.
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You should also go through any of the following checks that are applicable:
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- _Error handling._ The code should always check for invalid user
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input. User-facing error messages should be clear and when possible
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be actionable (it should be obvious to the user what they need to do
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in order to correct the problem).
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- _Translation._ Make sure that the strings are marked for
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[translation].
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- _Completeness of refactoring._ When reviewing a refactor, verify that the changes are
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complete. Usually, one can check that efficiently using `git grep`,
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and it's worth it, as we very frequently find issues by doing so.
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- _Documentation updates._ If this changes how something works, does it
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update the documentation in a corresponding way? If it's a new
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feature, is it documented, and documented in the right place?
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- _mypy annotations in Python code._ New functions should be annotated using
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[mypy] and existing annotations should be updated. Use of `Any`, `ignore`, and
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unparameterized containers should be limited to cases where a more precise
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type cannot be specified.
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### Automated testing
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- The tests should **validate that the feature works correctly**, and
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specifically test for common error conditions, bad user input, and potential
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bugs that are likely for the type of change being made. Tests that exclude
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whole classes of potential bugs are preferred when possible (e.g., the common
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test suite `test_markdown.py` between the Zulip server's [frontend and backend
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Markdown processors](../subsystems/markdown.md), or the `GetEventsTest` test
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for buggy race condition handling). See the [test writing][test-writing]
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documentation to learn more.
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- We are trying to maintain ~100% test coverage on the backend, so backend
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changes should have negative tests for the various error conditions. See
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[backend testing documentation][backend-testing] for details.
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- If the feature involves frontend changes, there should be frontend tests. See
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[frontend testing documentation][frontend-testing] for details.
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### Manual testing
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If the PR makes any frontend changes, you should make sure to play with the part
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of the app being changed to validate that things look and work as expected.
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While not all of the situations below will apply, here are some ideas for things
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that should be tested if they are applicable. Use the [development
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environment][development-environment] to test any web app changes.
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This might seem like a long process, but you can go through it quite quickly
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once you get the hang of it. Trust us, it will save time and review round-trips
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down the line!
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**Visual appearance:**
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- Open up the parts of the UI that were changed, and make sure they look as
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you were expecting.
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- Is the new UI consistent with similar UI elements? Think about fonts, colors,
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sizes, etc. If a new or modified element has multiple states (e.g. "on" and
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"off"), consider all of them.
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- Is the new UI aligned correctly with the elements around it, both vertically and
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horizontally?
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- If the PR adds or modifies a clickable element, does it have a hover behavior
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that's consistent with similar UI elements?
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- If the PR adds or modifies an element (e.g. a button or checkbox) that is
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sometimes disabled, is the disabled version of the UI consistent with similar
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UI elements?
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- Did the PR accidentally affect any other parts of the UI? E.g., if the PR
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modifies some CSS, look for other elements that may have been altered
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unintentionally. Use `git grep` to see if the code you modified is being used
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elsewhere.
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- Now check all of the above in the other theme (light/dark).
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**Responsiveness and internationalization:**
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- Check the new UI at different window sizes, including mobile sizes (you can
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use Chrome DevTools if you like). Does it look good in both wide and narrow
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windows?
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- To simulate what will happen when the UI is translated to different languages,
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try changing any new strings, or ones that are now displayed differently, to
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make them 1.5x longer, and check if anything breaks. What would happen if the
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strings were half as long as in English?
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**Strings (text):**
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If the PR adds or modifies strings, check the following:
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- Does the wording seem consistent with similar features (similar style, level
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of detail, etc.)?
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- If there is a number, are the `N = 1` and `N > 1` cases both handled properly?
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**Tooltips:**
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- Do elements that require tooltips have them? Check similar elements to see
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whether a tooltip is needed, and what information it should contain.
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**Functionality:**
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We're finally getting to the part where you actually use the new/updated
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feature. :) Test to see if it works as expected, trying a variety of scenarios.
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If it works as described in the issue but seems awkward in some way, note this
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on the PR.
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If relevant, be sure to check that:
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- Live updates are working as expected.
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- Keyboard navigation, including tabbing to the interactive elements, is working
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as expected.
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Some scenarios to consider:
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- Try clicking on any interactive elements, multiple times, in a variety of orders.
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- If the feature affects the **message view**, try it out in different types of
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narrows: topic, stream, All messages, direct messages.
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- If the feature affects the **compose box** in the web app, try both ways of
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[resizing the compose box](https://zulip.com/help/resize-the-compose-box).
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Test both stream messages and direct messages.
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- If the feature might require **elevated permissions**, check it out as a user who has
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permissions to use it and one who does not.
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- Think about how the feature might **interact with other features**, and try out
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such scenarios. For example:
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- If the PR adds a banner, is it possible that it would be shown at the same
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time as other banners? Does something reasonable happen?
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- If the feature has to do with topic editing, do you need to think
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about what happens when a topic is resolved/unresolved?
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- If it's a message view feature, would anything go wrong if the message was
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collapsed or muted? If it was colored like an `@`-mention or a direct message?
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## Review process and communication
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### Asking for a code review
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The [pull request review process](../contributing/review-process.md) guide
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provides a detailed overview of Zulip's PR review process. Your reviewers and
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Zulip's maintainers will help shepherd your PR through the process. There are
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also some additional ways to ask for a code review:
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- Are there folks who have been working on similar things, or a loosely related
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area? If so, they might be a good person to review your PR. `@`-mention them
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with something like "`@person`, would you be up for reviewing this?" If
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you're not sure whether they are familiar with how Zulip code reviews work, you
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can also include a link to this guide.
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- If you're not sure who to ask, you can post a message in
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[#code-review](https://chat.zulip.org/#narrow/stream/91-code-review) on [the Zulip
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development community server](https://zulip.com/development-community/) to reach
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out to a wider group of potential reviewers.
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Please be patient and mindful of the fact that it isn't always possible to
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provide a quick reply. Going though the [review process](#how-to-review-code)
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described above for your own PR will make your code easier and faster to review,
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which makes it much more likely that it will be reviewed quickly and require
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fewer review cycles.
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### Reviewing someone else's code
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#### Fast replies are key
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For the author of a PR, getting feedback quickly is really important
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for making progress quickly and staying productive. That means that
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if you get @-mentioned on a PR with a request for you to review it,
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it helps the author a lot if you reply promptly.
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A reply doesn't even have to be a full review; if a PR is big or if
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you're pressed for time, then just getting some kind of reply in
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quickly -- initial thoughts, feedback on the general direction, or
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just saying you're busy and when you'll have time to look harder -- is
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still really valuable for the author and for anyone else who might
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review the PR.
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People in the Zulip project live and work in many time zones, and code
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reviewers also need focused chunks of time to write code and do other
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things, so an immediate reply isn't always possible. But a good
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benchmark is to try to always reply **within one workday**, at least
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with a short initial reply, if you're working regularly on Zulip. And
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sooner is better.
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#### Communication style
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Any time you leave a code review, be sure to treat the author with respect.
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Remember that they are generously spending their time on an effort to improve
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the Zulip project. Thank them for their work, and express your appreciation for
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anything the author did especially well, whether it's a nice commit message, a
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prompt response to earlier feedback, or a well-written test.
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Be as clear and direct as you can when describing requested changes. There is no
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need to apologize when asking for a change; you're collaborating with the
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author to make the PR as good as you can together.
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Be sure to explain the motivation for the changes you're requesting if it's not
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obvious, so that the author can learn for next time. It may be helpful to point
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to developer documentation, such as the [commit discipline
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guide][commit-discipline].
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#### Fixing up the PR
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If a pull request just needs a little fixing to make it mergeable,
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feel free to do that in a new commit, then push your branch to GitHub
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and mention the branch in a comment on the pull request. That'll save
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the maintainer time and get the PR merged quicker.
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### Responding to review feedback
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Once you've received a review and resolved any feedback, it's critical
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to update the GitHub thread to reflect that. Best practices are to:
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- Make sure that CI passes and the PR is rebased onto recent `main`.
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- Post comments on each feedback thread explaining at least how you
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resolved the feedback, as well as any other useful information
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(problems encountered, reasoning for why you picked one of several
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options, a test you added to make sure the bug won't recur, etc.).
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- Post a summary comment in the main feed for the PR, explaining that
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this is ready for another review, and summarizing any changes from
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the previous version, details on how you tested the changes, new
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screenshots/etc. More detail is better than less, as long as you
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take the time to write clearly.
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If you resolve the feedback, but the PR has merge conflicts, CI
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failures, or the most recent comment is the reviewer asking you to fix
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something, it's very likely that a potential reviewer skimming your PR
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will assume it isn't ready for review and move on to other work.
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If you need help or think an open discussion topic requires more
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feedback or a more complex discussion, move the discussion to a topic
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in the [Zulip development community server][czo]. Be sure to provide links
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from the GitHub PR to the conversation (and vice versa) so that it's
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convenient to read both conversations together.
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## Additional resources
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We also recommend the following resources on code reviews.
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- [The Gentle Art of Patch Review](https://sage.thesharps.us/2014/09/01/the-gentle-art-of-patch-review/)
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article by Sarah Sharp
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- [Zulip & Good Code Review](https://www.harihareswara.net/sumana/2016/05/17/0)
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article by Sumana Harihareswara
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- [Code Review - A consolidation of advice and stuff from the
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internet](https://gist.github.com/porterjamesj/002fb27dd70df003646df46f15e898de)
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article by James J. Porter
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- [Zulip code of conduct](../code-of-conduct.md)
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[code-style]: code-style.md
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[commit-discipline]: commit-discipline.md
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[commit-messages]: commit-discipline.md#commit-messages
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[test-writing]: ../testing/testing.md
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[backend-testing]: ../testing/testing-with-django.md
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[frontend-testing]: ../testing/testing-with-node.md
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[mypy]: ../testing/mypy.md
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[git-tool]: ../git/zulip-tools.md#fetch-a-pull-request-and-rebase
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[translation]: ../translating/translating.md
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[czo]: https://zulip.com/development-community/
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[development-environment]: ../development/overview.md
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