Bunto is an open source project, built one contribution at a time by community members just like you. These community contributions can come in many forms beyond just writing code, from reporting an issue or suggesting a new feature to improving documentation or providing feedback on proposed changes.
If you’ve been looking to get involved with the Bunto community, but didn’t know, we’ve recently made it easier to contribute to Bunto in two ways:
First, we’ve completely rewritten the project’s contributing guidelines, outlining the various ways you can contribute, and including better instructions for submitting proposed changes via GitHub.com or for submitting your first code improvement. And if you have any feedback, we’d love to hear it! Simply click the “improve this page” button in the top right corner of the contributing documentation.
Second, this week, we created six community interest groups, we’re calling Bunto affinity teams. If you’re interested in a particular aspect of the project (or just want to learn more), you can join any one of these teams (or two, or three), to participate in discussions about potential bugs and proposed improvements. And the best part is there’s no commitment. If you just want to listen, or if at any point you want to leave (or switch teams), that’s totally fine. We won’t say a thing. To learn more about the various affinity teams, or to join one (please do!), just head on over to teams.buntowaf.tk.
We hope these changes will make it easier for you to make your first (or second, or third) contribution to Bunto today. Thanks for helping to make Bunto awesome!