See also: Flutter's code of conduct
We invite you to join our team! Everyone is welcome to contribute code via pull requests, to file issues on GitHub, to help people asking for help on our mailing lists, our chat channels, or on Stack Overflow, to help triage, reproduce, or fix bugs that people have filed, to add to our documentation, or to help out in any other way.
We grant commit access (which includes full rights to the issue database, such as being able to edit labels) to people who have gained our trust and demonstrated a commitment to Flutter. For more details see the Contributor access page on our wiki.
We communicate primarily over GitHub and on chat channels.
If you want to help us triage, you are very welcome to do so!
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Join the #hackers-triage chat channel.
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Read our code of conduct, which stipulates explicitly that everyone must be gracious, respectful, and professional. If you're helping out with triage, you are representing the Flutter team, and so you want to make sure to make a good impression!
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Help out as described in our wiki: https://github.com/flutter/flutter/wiki/Triage You won't be able to add labels at first, so instead start by trying to do the other steps, e.g. trying to reproduce the problem and asking for people to provide enough details that you can reproduce the problem, pointing out duplicates, and so on. Chat on the #hackers-triage channel to let us know what you're up to!
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Familiarize yourself with our issue hygiene wiki page, which covers the meanings of some important GitHub labels and milestones.
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Once you've been doing this for a while, someone will invite you to the flutter-hackers team on GitHub and you'll be able to add labels too. See the contributor access wiki page for details.
To develop for Flutter, you will eventually need to become familiar with our processes and conventions. This section lists the documents that describe these methodologies. The following list is ordered: you are strongly recommended to go through these documents in the order presented.
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Our code of conduct, which stipulates explicitly that everyone must be gracious, respectful, and professional. This also documents our conflict resolution policy and encourages people to ask questions.
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Values, which talks about what we care most about.
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Setting up your engine development environment, which describes the steps you need to configure your computer to work on Flutter's engine. If you only want to write code for the Flutter framework, you can skip this step. Flutter's engine mainly uses C++, Java, and Objective-C.
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Setting up your framework development environment, which describes the steps you need to configure your computer to work on Flutter's framework. Flutter's framework mainly uses Dart.
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Tree hygiene, which covers how to land a PR, how to do code review, how to handle breaking changes, how to handle regressions, and how to handle post-commit test failures.
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Issue hygiene, which covers our processes around triaging bugs, escalating high priority bugs, assigning bugs, and our GitHub labels and milestones.
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Our style guide, which includes advice for designing APIs for Flutter, and how to format code in the framework.
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Flutter design doc template, which should be used when proposing a new technical design. This is a good practice to do before coding more intricate changes.
In addition to the above, there are many pages on our Wiki that may be of interest. For a curated list of pages see the sidebar on the wiki's home page. They are more or less listed in order of importance.