Contributing code to Astropy, a worked example#

This example is based on fixing Issue 1761 from the list of astropy issues on GitHub. It resulted in pull request 1917.

The issue title was “len() does not work for coordinates” with description “It would be nice to be able to use len on coordinate arrays to know how many coordinates are present.”

This particular example was chosen because it was tagged as easy in GitHub; seemed like the best place to start out!

Before you begin#

Make sure you have a local copy of astropy set up as described in Try the development version. In a nutshell, the output of git remote -v, run in the directory where your local of astropy resides, should be something like this:

astropy   git@github.com:astropy/astropy.git (fetch)
astropy   git@github.com:astropy/astropy.git (push)
origin    git@github.com:your-user-name/astropy.git (fetch)
origin    git@github.com:your-user-name/astropy.git (push)

The precise form of the URLs for origin depends on the authentication method you set up with GitHub.

The important point is that astropy should point to the official astropy repo and origin should point to your copy of astropy on GitHub.

Grab the latest updates to astropy#

A few steps in this tutorial take only a single command. They are broken out separately to outline the process in words as well as code.

Inform your local copy of astropy about the latest changes in the development version with:

git fetch astropy --tags

Set up an isolated workspace#

  • Make a new git branch for fixing this issue and switch to the branch:

    git checkout astropy/main -b fix-1761
    
  • Make a Python environment just for this fix and switch to that environment. The example below shows the necessary steps in the Miniconda/Anaconda Python distribution:

    conda create --name apy-1761 python=3.12 # replace 3.12 with desired version
    conda activate apy-1761
    

    If you are using a different distribution, see Python virtual environments for instructions for creating and activating a new environment.

  • Install our branch in this environment with:

    python -m pip install --editable ".[test]"
    

Do you really have to set up a separate Python environment for each fix? No, but you definitely want to have a Python environment for your work on code contributions. Making new environments is fast, does not take much space, and provide a way to keep your work organized.

If installation fails, try to upgrade pip using python -m pip install pip --upgrade command. It is also a good practice to keep your conda up-to-date by running conda update conda --name base when prompted to do so; maybe git too.

Test first, please#

It would be hard to overstate the importance of testing in Astropy. Tests are what gives you confidence that new code does what it should and that it does not break old code.

You should at least run the relevant tests before you make any changes to make sure that your Python environment is set up properly.

The first challenge is figuring out where to look for relevant tests. Issue 1761 is a problem in the coordinates package, so the tests for it are in astropy/coordinates/tests. The rest of astropy has a similar layout, as described at Testing Guidelines.

Run the current tests in that directory with:

pytest astropy/coordinates/tests

If the bug you are working on involves remote data access, you need to run the tests with an extra flag, i.e., pytest ... --remote-data.

In the event where all the tests passed with the bug present, new tests are needed to expose this bug.

A subpackage organizes its tests into multiple test modules; e.g.:

$ ls astropy/coordinates/tests
test_angles.py
test_angular_separation.py
test_api_ape5.py
test_arrays.py
...

Issue 1761 affects arrays of coordinates, so it seems sensible to put the new test in test_arrays.py. As with all of the steps, when in doubt, please ask on the astropy-dev mailing list.

The goal at this point may be a little counter-intuitive: write a test that we know will fail with the current code. This test allows astropy to check, in an automated way, whether our fix actually works and to prevent regression (i.e., make sure future changes to code do not break our fix).

Looking over the existing code in test_arrays.py, each test is a function with a name that starts with test_. An appropriate place to add the test is after the last test function in the file.

Give the test a reasonably clear name; e.g., test_array_len. The easiest way to figure out what you need to import and how to set up the test is to look at other tests. The full test is in the traceback below and in pull request 1917.

Write the test, then see if it works as expected; remember, in this case we expect it to fail without the patch from pull request 1917. Running pytest astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py would give the expected failure; an excerpt from the output is:

================= FAILURES =============================
______________ test_array_len __________________________

    def test_array_len():
        from .. import ICRS

        input_length = 5
        ra = np.linspace(0, 360, input_length)
        dec = np.linspace(0, 90, input_length)

        c = ICRS(ra, dec, unit=(u.degree, u.degree))

>       assert len(c) == input_length
E       TypeError: object of type 'ICRS' has no len()

astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py:291: TypeError

Success!

Add this test to your local git repo#

Keep git commits small and focused on one logical piece at a time. The test we just wrote is one logical change, so we will commit it. You could, if you prefer, wait and commit this test along with your fix.

For this tutorial, we will commit the test separately. If you are not sure what to do, ask on astropy-dev mailing list.

Check what was changed#

We can see what has changed with git status:

$ git status
On branch fix-1761
Your branch is up-to-date with 'astropy/main'.

Changes not staged for commit:
  (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
  (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)

    modified:   astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py

no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")

There are two bits of information here:

  • one file changed; i.e., astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py

  • this file has not been added to git’s staging area yet, so it is listed under Changes not staged for commit.

Use git diff to see what changes have been made:

$ git diff
diff --git a/astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py b/astropy/coordinates/test
index 2785b59..7eecfbb 100644
--- a/astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py
+++ b/astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py
@@ -278,3 +278,14 @@ def test_array_indexing():
     assert c2.equinox == c1.equinox
     assert c3.equinox == c1.equinox
     assert c4.equinox == c1.equinox
+
+
+def test_array_len():
+    from .. import ICRS
+
+    input_length = 5
+    ra = np.linspace(0, 360, input_length)
+    dec = np.linspace(0, 90, input_length)
+
+    c = ICRS(ra, dec, unit=(u.degree, u.degree))
+
+    assert len(c) == input_length

A graphical interface to git makes keeping track of these sorts of changes even easier; see this list of GUI Clients if you are interested.

Stage the change#

git requires you to add changes in two steps:

  • stage the change with git add ...; this adds the file to the list of items that will be added to the repo when you are ready to commit.

  • commit the change with git commit ...; this actually adds the changes to your repo.

These can be combined into one step (not recommended); the advantage of doing it in two steps is that it is easier to undo staging than committing. As we will see later, git status even tells you how to do it.

Staging can be very handy if you are making changes in a couple of different places that you want to commit at the same time. Make your first changes, stage it, then make your second change and stage that. Once everything is staged, commit the changes as one commit.

In this case, first stage the change:

git add astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py

You get no notice at the command line that anything has changed, but git status will let you know:

$ git status
On branch fix-1761
Your branch is up-to-date with 'astropy/main'.

Changes to be committed:
  (use "git reset HEAD <file>..." to unstage)

    modified:   astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py

Note that git helpfully includes the command necessary to unstage the change if you want to.

Commit your change#

Next, we will commit the test without the fix:

$ git commit -m "Add test for array coordinate length (issue #1761)"
[fix-1761 dd4ef8c] Add test for array coordinate length (issue #1761)
 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+)

Commit messages should be concise. Including the GitHub issue number allows GitHub to automatically create links to the relevant issue.

Use git status to get a recap of where we are so far:

$ git status
On branch fix-1761
Your branch is ahead of 'astropy/main' by 1 commit.
  (use "git push" to publish your local commits)

nothing to commit, working directory clean

In other words, we have made a change to our local copy of astropy but we have not pushed (transferred) that change to our GitHub account.

Fix the issue#

Write the code#

Now that we have a test written, we will fix the issue. A full discussion of the fix is beyond the scope of this tutorial, but the fix is to add a __len__ method to astropy.coordinates.SphericalCoordinatesBase in coordsystems.py (the code has since been refactored, if you try to look for it). All of the spherical coordinate systems inherit from this base class and it is this base class that implements the __getitem__ method that allows indexing of coordinate arrays.

See pull request 1917 to view the changes to the code.

Test your change#

There are a few levels at which you want to test:

  • Does this code change make the test we wrote succeed now? Check by running pytest astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py. In this case, yes!

  • Do the rest of the coordinate tests still pass? Check by running pytest astropy/coordinates/. In this case, yes, we have not broken anything!

  • Do all of the astropy tests still succeed? Check by running pytest from the top-level directory. This may take a while depending on the speed of your system. Success again!

Note

Tests that are skipped or xfailed are fine. A fail or an error is not fine. If you get stuck, ask on astropy-dev mailing list for help!

Stage and commit your change#

Add the file to your git repo in two steps: stage, then commit.

To make this a little different than the commit we did above, make sure you are still in the top level directory and check the git status:

$ git status
On branch fix-1761
Your branch is ahead of 'astropy/main' by 1 commit.
  (use "git push" to publish your local commits)

Changes not staged for commit:
  (use "git add <file>..." to update what will be committed)
  (use "git checkout -- <file>..." to discard changes in working directory)

    modified:   astropy/coordinates/coordsystems.py

no changes added to commit (use "git add" and/or "git commit -a")

Note that git knows what has changed no matter what directory you are in (as long as you are in one of the directories in the repo, that is).

Stage the change with:

git add astropy/coordinates/coordsystems.py

For this commit, it is helpful to use a multi-line commit message that will automatically close the issue on GitHub when this change is accepted. The snippet below accomplishes that in bash (and similar shells):

$ git commit -m"
> Add len() to coordinates
>
> Closes #1761"
[fix-1761 f196771] Add len() to coordinates
 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+)

Another option for multi-line commit message is to use a Git GUI Client or to run git commit without a message to get prompted by an editor.

The message after committing should look like this when you inspect with git log:

Add len() to coordinates

Closes #1761

If the commit message does not look right, run git commit --amend. If you still run into problems, please ask about fixing it at astropy-dev mailing list.

At this point, none of the Astropy maintainers know anything about your changes.

We will take care of that in a moment with a “pull request”, but first, see Stop and think: Any more tests or other changes?.

Stop and think: Any more tests or other changes?#

It never hurts to pause at this point and review whether your proposed changes are complete. In this case, there are some more tests that could be included, such as:

  • What happens when len() is called on a coordinate that is not an array?

  • Does len() work when the coordinate is an array with one entry?

Both of these are mentioned in pull request 1917, so it does not hurt to check them. In this case, they also provide an opportunity to illustrate a feature of the pytest framework.

The second case is easier, so it will be handled first following the development cycle we used above:

  • Make the change in astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py

  • Test the change

The test passed; but rather than committing this one change, we will also implement the check for the scalar case.

One could imagine two different desirable outcomes here:

  • len(scalar_coordinate) behaves just like len(scalar_angle), raising a TypeError for a scalar coordinate.

  • len(scalar_coordinate) returns 1 since there is one coordinate.

If you encounter a case like this and are not sure what to do, ask. The best place to ask is on GitHub on the page for the issue you are fixing.

Alternatively, make a choice and be clear in your pull request on GitHub what you chose and why; instructions for that are below.

Testing for an expected error#

In this case, we opted for raising a TypeError, because the user needs to know that the coordinate they created is not going to behave like an array of one coordinate if they try to index it later on.

The pytest framework makes testing for an exception relatively easy; you put the code you expect to fail in a with block:

c = ICRS(0, 0, unit=(u.degree, u.degree))

with pytest.raises(TypeError):
    len(c)

A test like this can be added test_array_len in test_arrays.py. In your own work, you may also choose to put that into a new test function, if you wish.

Aside: Python lesson–let others do your work#

The actual fix to this issue was very, very short. In coordsystems.py, two lines were added:

def __len__(self):
    return len(self.lonangle)

lonangle contains the Angle objects that represent longitude (sometimes this is an RA, sometimes a longitude). By simply calling len() on one of the angles in the array you get, for free, whatever behavior has been defined in the Angle class for handling the case of a scalar.

Adding an explicit check for the case of a scalar here would have the very big downside of having two things that need to be kept in sync: handling of scalars in Angle and in coordinates.

Commit any additional changes#

Continue to follow the development cycle above for other files that you need to modify, including changelog (see Edit the changelog) and documentation, as needed:

  • Check that all astropy tests still pass; see Test your change

  • git status to see what needs to be staged and committed

  • git add ... to stage the changes

  • git commit ... to commit the changes

  • git log to inspect the change history

The git commands, without their output, are:

git status
git add astropy/coordinates/tests/test_arrays.py
git commit -m "Add tests of len() for scalar coordinate and length 1 coordinate"
git log

Push your changes to your GitHub fork of astropy#

Use this command to push your local changes out to your copy of astropy on GitHub before asking for the changes to be reviewed:

git push origin fix-1761

Propose your changes as a pull request#

This stage requires going to your GitHub account and navigate to your copy of astropy; the url will be something like https://github.com/your-user-name/astropy.

Once there, select the branch that contains your fix from the branches dropdown:

../../_images/worked_example_switch_branch.png

After selecting the correct branch, click on the “Pull Request” button, as shown below:

../../_images/pull_button.png

Name your pull request something sensible. Include the issue number with a leading # in the description of the pull request so that a link is created to the original issue, as stated in astropy’s pull request template.

Please see pull request 1917 for the pull request showcased in this tutorial.

Edit the changelog#

Keeping the list of changes up to date is nearly impossible unless each contributor makes the appropriate updates as they propose changes.

Create a file docs/changes/coordinates/<PULL REQUEST>.feature.rst, where <PULL REQUEST> is the pull request number (1917 for this example). The content of this file should summarize what you did. For writing changelog entries, you do not need to know much about the markup language being used (though you can read as much as you want about it at the Sphinx primer); look at other entries and emulate.

For this issue, the file would contain:

Implemented ``len()`` for coordinate objects.

Putting len() in double-backtick makes that text render in a monospaced font.

Commit your changes and push#

You can use git status as above or jump right to staging and committing:

git add docs/changes/coordinates/<PULL REQUEST>.feature.rst
git commit -m "Add changelog entry"
git push

Revise and push as necessary#

You may be asked to make changes in the discussion of the pull request. Make those changes in your local copy, commit them to your local repo, and push them to GitHub. GitHub will automatically update your pull request.