.. _Adding change notes with your PRs: Adding change notes with your PRs ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ It is very important to maintain a log for news of how updating to the new version of the software will affect end-users. This is why we enforce collection of the change fragment files in pull requests as per `Towncrier philosophy`_. The idea is that when somebody makes a change, they must record the bits that would affect end-users only including information that would be useful to them. Then, when the maintainers publish a new release, they'll automatically use these records to compose a change log for the respective version. It is important to understand that including unnecessary low-level implementation related details generates noise that is not particularly useful to the end-users most of the time. And so such details should be recorded in the Git history rather than a changelog. Alright! So how to add a news fragment? ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ``setuptools`` uses :pypi:`towncrier` for changelog management. To submit a change note about your PR, add a text file into the ``changelog.d/`` folder. It should contain an explanation of what applying this PR will change in the way end-users interact with the project. One sentence is usually enough but feel free to add as many details as you feel necessary for the users to understand what it means. **Use the past tense** for the text in your fragment because, combined with others, it will be a part of the "news digest" telling the readers **what changed** in a specific version of the library *since the previous version*. You should also use reStructuredText syntax for highlighting code (inline or block), linking parts of the docs or external sites. If you wish to sign your change, feel free to add ``-- by :user:`github-username``` at the end (replace ``github-username`` with your own!). Finally, name your file following the convention that Towncrier understands: it should start with the number of an issue or a PR followed by a dot, then add a patch type, like ``change``, ``doc``, ``misc`` etc., and add ``.rst`` as a suffix. If you need to add more than one fragment, you may add an optional sequence number (delimited with another period) between the type and the suffix. In general the name will follow ``..rst`` pattern, where the categories are: - ``change``: Any backwards compatible code change - ``breaking``: Any backwards-compatibility breaking change - ``doc``: A change to the documentation - ``misc``: Changes internal to the repo like CI, test and build changes - ``deprecation``: For deprecations of an existing feature or behavior A pull request may have more than one of these components, for example a code change may introduce a new feature that deprecates an old feature, in which case two fragments should be added. It is not necessary to make a separate documentation fragment for documentation changes accompanying the relevant code changes. Examples for adding changelog entries to your Pull Requests ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ File :file:`changelog.d/2395.doc.1.rst`: .. code-block:: rst Added a ``:user:`` role to Sphinx config -- by :user:`webknjaz` File :file:`changelog.d/1354.misc.rst`: .. code-block:: rst Added ``towncrier`` for changelog management -- by :user:`pganssle` File :file:`changelog.d/2355.change.rst`: .. code-block:: rst When pip is imported as part of a build, leave :py:mod:`distutils` patched -- by :user:`jaraco` .. tip:: See :file:`pyproject.toml` for all available categories (``tool.towncrier.type``). .. _Towncrier philosophy: https://towncrier.readthedocs.io/en/latest/#philosophy