To get started using exercism.io to practice or provide feedback on other people's code, check out the getting started page on the website.
To report a bug, suggest improvements to exercism.io, or if you're having trouble installing or using the CLI, please open a GitHub issue.
If you're having trouble writing the code to solve a problem, then your best bet is StackOverflow (remember to tag the question with #exercism). Another option is to submit the code even though it doesn't pass the tests yet, and then go to your submission page to explain where you're stuck.
We welcome questions, and will do our best to help you out!
Follow us on twitter @exercism_io.
Jump in and chat with other exercism enthusiasts on the #exercism channel on irc.freenode.net. It's not a very active channel, but we're a friendly bunch.
For occasional updates, such as new language tracks being launched, sign up for the newsletter.
Exercism.io was started by Katrina. To get in touch with her, send an email to kytrinyx@exercism.io.
We're working on improving the CONTRIBUTING.md document, which will describe the various parts of the system and how they fit together.
Exercism.io is free and open source, and many, many people have contributed to the project by:
- Reporting, reproducing, or fixing bugs
- Triaging issues
- Suggesting, discussing, or implementing features
- Refactoring
- Improving the design of the site
- Adding tests
- Improving documentation
- Improving test suites for the language tracks
- Adding new problems to existing tracks
- Porting problems to new tracks
- Providing feedback on people's code
- Reviewing pull requests
- ... and more
This is a project that started by accident and could never have gotten off the ground by the efforts of any single person.
Thank you!
At the moment the setup instructions are skewed heavily in favor of linux and Mac OS X. This doesn't mean you can't develop on Windows, only that we don't yet know how to get everything set up for Windows. We're hoping to address that soon!
- Install postgresql with:
brew install postgresql
orapt-get install postgresql-9.2
- Copy
.ruby-version.example
to.ruby-version
if you use a Ruby version manager such as RVM, rbenv or chruby - Install gems with:
bundle
- Install
mailcatcher
withgem install mailcatcher
- Get a client id/secret from GitHub at https://github.com/settings/applications/new.
- Name: whatever
- URL: http://localhost:4567
- Callback url: http://localhost:4567/github/callback
- Presuming you have Postgres installed, run
rake db:setup
- Run the database migrations with
rake db:migrate
. - Fetch the seed data with
rake db:seeds:fetch
. - Run the database seed with
rake db:seed
. - Copy
config/env
to.env
- Edit
.env
to fill in the correct values, including the GitHub client id/secret procured earlier. - Start the server with
foreman start
- Login at http://localhost:4567.
- You can view the emails sent in MailCatcher in your browser at localhost:1080.
- Work through 'Frontend development setup' below and run lineman for correct styling at http://localhost:4567
- Install node and npm
- osx: brew install node
- others see: https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/Installing-Node.js-via-package-manager
- Install lineman via
sudo npm install -g lineman
cd frontend
and start lineman withlineman run
- note lineman watches for file changes and compiles them automatically, it is not required to be running for the server to run
- Start compass with
compass watch
- to compile
compass compile
For CSS we are using Sass (with .scss
). Feel free to use Bootstrap 3 components and mixins. Or if you want to use even more mixins you can use Compass. Structurewise we try to seperate components, mixins and layouts. Where layouts should be a single page (using an HTML id as a selector) and components should be reusable partials, which can look different by layout.
You can find the compass config in lib/app/config.rb
.
Our styleguide is reachable under (/styleguide)[http://exercism.io/styleguide] and built with KSS, which enables you to write examples to *.scss
files
If you want to send emails, you will need to fill out the relevant environment variables in .env
and uncomment the lines so that the variables get exported.
There's a script in bin/console
that will load pry with the exercism environment loaded.
This will let you poke around at the objects in the system, such as finding users and changing
things about submissions or comments, making it easier to test specific things.
user = User.find_by_username 'whatever'
user.submissions
- Create test database with:
createdb -O exercism exercism_test
. - Prepare the test environment with
RACK_ENV=test rake db:migrate
. - Make sure that
mailcatcher
is running. - Run the test suite with
rake
orrake test
.
To run a single test suite, you can do so with:
ruby path/to/the_test.rb
If it complains about dependencies, then either we forgot to require the correct dependencies (a distinct possibility), or we are dependening on a particular tag of a gem installed directly from github (this happens on occasion).
If there's a git dependency, you can do this:
bundle exec ruby path/to/the_test.rb
For the require, you'll need to figure out what the missing dependency is. Feel free to open an issue on github. It's likely that someone familiar with the codebase will be able to identify the problem immediately.
To enable code coverage run:
COVERAGE=1 rake test
Browse the results located in coverage/index.html
Let Heroku know that Lineman will be building our assets. From the command line:
heroku config:set BUILDPACK_URL=https://github.com/testdouble/heroku-buildpack-lineman-ruby.git
Thank you for wanting to contribute! ❤️💖❤️
Fork and clone. Hack hack hack. Submit a pull request and tell us why your idea is awesome.
For more details, please read the contributing guide.
To join the mailing list, send an email to exercism@librelist.com to be automatically subscribed or check out the Archives.
GNU Affero General Public License
Copyright (C) 2013 Katrina Owen, _@kytrinyx.com
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Affero General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Affero General Public License for more details.