Our new address is https://github.com/catarse/catarse
Welcome to Catarse's source code repository. Our goal with opening the source code is to stimulate the creation of a community of developers around a high-quality crowdfunding platform.
You can see the software in action in http://catarse.me.
This software was first created as Brazil's first crowdfunding platform. Thus, it was first made in Portuguese and with a brazilian payment gateway. We are now internationalizing it, and already have a good support for the english language and for paypal express checkout. See below the Payment gateways section for more information about integrating Catarse with a payment system of your choice. If you want to join us in this effort, please feel free to fork the repository and send us a pull request with your changes. If you have any doubt, please join our Google Group at http://groups.google.com/group/catarse-dev and we will help you.
We hope to support a lot of languages in the future. So we are willing to accept pull requests with translations to other languages. Here's a small guide to translate Catarse to your language in a way that we can integrate your translation in the main repository:
- TODO
Thanks a lot to Daniel Walmsley, from http://purpose.com, for starting the internationalization and beginning the english translation.
Currently, we support MoIP and PayPal through our payment engines. Payment engines are extensions to Catarse that implement a specific payment gateway logic. The two current working engines are:
- MoIP
- PayPal
If you have created a different payment engine to Catarse please contact us so we can link your engine here. If you want to create a payment engine please join our mailing list at http://groups.google.com/group/catarse-dev
Here are some tips to get things started:
Before contributing, take a look at our Roadmap (https://www.pivotaltracker.com/projects/427075) and discuss your plans in our mailing list (http://groups.google.com/group/catarse-dev).
Our pivotal is concerned with user visible features using user stories. But we do have some features not visible to users that are planned such as:
- Turn Catarse into a Rails Engine with customizable views.
- Turn Backer model into a finite state machine using the state_machine gem as we did with the Project model.
- Improve the payments engine isolation providing a clear API to integrate new payment engines in the backer review page.
- Make a installer script to guide users through initial Catarse configuration.
Currently, a lot of functionality is not tested. If you don't know how to start contributing, please help us regaining control over the code and write a few tests for us! Any doubt, please join our Google Group at http://groups.google.com/group/catarse-dev and we will help you out.
After that, just fork the project, change what you want, and send us a pull request.
- We prefer the
{foo: 'bar'}
over{:foo => 'bar'}
- We prefer the
->(foo){ bar(foo) }
overlambda{|foo| bar(foo) }
We use RSpec and Steak for the tests, and the best practices are:
- Create one acceptance tests for each scenario of the feature you are trying to implement.
- Create model and controller tests to keep 100% of code coverage at least in the new parts that you are writing.
- Feel free to add specs to the code that is already in the repository without the proper coverage ;)
- Try to isolate models from controllers as best as you can.
- Regard the existing tests for a style guide, we try to use implicit spec subjects and lazy evaluation as often as we can.
Author: Daniel Weinmann
Contributors: You know who you are ;) The commit history can help, but the list was getting bigger and pointless to keep in the README.
Copyright (c) 2011 Softa
Licensed under the MIT license (see MIT-LICENSE file)