Open [a GitHub issue](https://github.com/woocommerce/woocommerce-admin/issues/new/choose), that's all. If you have write access, add any appropriate labels.
We encourage you to ask for help. We want your first experience with WooCommerce Admin to be a good one, so don't be shy. If you're wondering why something is the way it is, or how a decision was made, you can tag issues with [Type] Question or prefix them with “Question:”
5. Visit your dev environment in the browser to enable the `WooCommerce Admin` plugin and try it out.
Tips:
- Try to keep each PR small (around 200-250 lines or less, if you can), and having multiple very small commits in each PR is preferable to one larger commit (especially if the PR is larger).
- Don't combine code formatting changes with meaningful ones. If there's formatting work that needs to be done en masse, do it all in one PR, then open another one for meaningful code changes.
- Add unit tests to your PR for better code coverage and review.
After you've made your updates, you're ready to commit:
1. Run a complete build via `npm run build`.
2. Do a `composer install` to ensure PHP dependencies can run on the pre-commit hook.
3. Create your commit. Write a descriptive, but short first line (e.g. "Reports: Reticulate the splines"), and add more details below. If your commit addresses a github issue, reference it by number here (e.g. "This commit fixes issue #123 by reticulating all the splines.")
4. Push the branch up to your local fork, then create a PR via the GitHub web interface.
WooCommerce Admin is licensed under [GNU General Public License v2 (or later)](/LICENSE.md).
All materials contributed should be compatible with the GPLv2. This means that if you own the material, you agree to license it under the GPLv2 license. If you are contributing code that is not your own, such as adding a component from another Open Source project, or adding an `npm` package, you need to make sure you follow these steps:
1. Check that the code has a license. If you can't find one, you can try to contact the original author and get permission to use, or ask them to release under a compatible Open Source license.
2. Check the license is compatible with [GPLv2](http://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.en.html#GPLCompatibleLicenses), note that the Apache 2.0 license is *not* compatible.