elm/README.md
2016-03-15 12:28:22 -06:00

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# xElm
![build status](https://travis-ci.org/exercism/xelm.svg?branch=master)
Exercism Exercises in Elm
## Setup
The simplest way to install Elm is via Node.js/NPM.
If you don't already have Node.js installed on your computer, you can download it from [the official site](https://nodejs.org/). Once you have Node.js up and running, follow these steps to install the Elm platform and elm-test.
```bash
$ npm install --global elm elm-test
```
## Contributing
Thank you so much for contributing! :tada:
Please start by reading the general Exercism [contributing guide](https://github.com/exercism/x-api/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#the-exercise-data).
We welcome pull requests that provide fixes and improvements to existing exercises. If you're unsure, then go ahead and open a GitHub issue, and we'll discuss the change.
Please keep the following in mind:
- Pull requests should be focused on a single exercise, issue, or change.
- We welcome changes to code style, and wording. Please open a separate PR for these changes if possible.
- Please open an issue before creating a PR that makes significant (breaking) changes to an existing exercise or makes changes across many exercises. It is best to discuss these changes before doing the work.
- Follow the coding standards found in [The Elm Style Guide](http://elm-lang.org/docs/style-guide). Please consider running [elm-format](https://github.com/avh4/elm-format) before submitting a pull request.
- Watch out for trailing spaces, extra blank lines, and spaces in blank lines.
- Each exercise must stand on its own. Do not reference files outside the exercise directory. They will not be included when the user fetches the exercise.
- Exercises should use only the Elm core libraries.
- Please do not add a README or README.md file to the exercise directory. The READMEs are constructed using shared metadata, which lives in the
[exercism/x-common](https://github.com/exercism/x-common) repository.
- Each exercise should have a test suite, an example solution, a template file for the real implementation and an `elm-package.json` file with the `elm-test` and `elm-console` dependencies. The CI build expects files to be named using the following convention. The example solution should be named `ExerciseModuleName.example`. The template file should be named `ExerciseModuleName.elm`. Test file should be named `ExerciseModuleNameTest.elm`.
- The recommended workflow when working on an exercise is to first create the implementation and test files, `ExerciseModuleName.elm` and `ExerciseModuleNameTest.elm`.
- Test the new exercise directly by running `elm-test exercises/exercise_module_name/ExerciseModuleNameTest.elm`.
- Once the implementation of the exercise is complete, move `ExerciseModuleName.elm` to `ExerciseModuleName.example` and create the template file.
- Make sure everything is good to go by running all tests with `bin/build.sh`.
- Please do not commit any Elm configuration files or directories inside the exercise, such as `elm-stuff`. Please include only the standard `elm-package.json`.
- Test files should use the following format:
```elm
module Main (..) where
import Task
import Console
import ElmTest exposing (..)
tests : Test
tests =
suite
"ExerciseModuleName"
[ test "first test" (assertEqual True True)
, test "second test" (assertEqual False False)
]
port runner : Signal (Task.Task x ())
port runner =
Console.run (consoleRunner tests)
```
- All the tests for xElm exercises can be run from the top level of the repo with `bin/build.sh`. Please run this command before submitting your PR.
- If you are submitting a new exercise, be sure to add it to the appropriate place in the `config.json` and `elm-package.json` files. Also, please run `bin/fetch-configlet && bin/configlet` to ensure the exercise is configured correctly.
## License
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Katrina Owen, _@kytrinyx.com