Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
43 lines (36 loc) · 2.25 KB

CONDUCT.md

File metadata and controls

43 lines (36 loc) · 2.25 KB

Code of Conduct

The Code of Conduct governs how we behave in public or in private whenever the project will be judged by our actions. We expect it to be honored by everyone who represents the project officially or informally, claims affiliation with the project, or participates directly.

We strive to:

  • Be open: We invite anybody to participate in any aspect of our projects. Our community is open, and any responsibility can be carried by any contributor who demonstrates the required capacity and competence.
  • Be empathetic: We work together to resolve conflict, assume good intentions, and do our best to act in an empathic fashion. By understanding that humanity drops a few packets in online interactions, and adjusting accordingly, we can create a comfortable environment for everyone to share their ideas.
  • Be collaborative: We prefer to work transparently and to involve interested parties early on in the process. Wherever possible, we work closely with others in the open source community to coordinate our efforts.
  • Be decisive: We expect participants in the project to resolve disagreements constructively. When they cannot, we escalate the matter to structures with designated leaders to arbitrate and provide clarity and direction.
  • Be responsible: We hold ourselves accountable for our actions. When we make mistakes, we take responsibility for them. When we need help, we reach out to others. When it comes time to move on from a project, we take the proper steps to ensure that others can pick up where we left off.

This code is not exhaustive or complete. It serves to distill our common understanding of a collaborative, shared environment and goals. We expect it to be followed in spirit as much as in the letter.


The ReGraphQL Code of Conduct is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License.

Some of the ideas and wording for the statements above were based on work by Mozilla, Ubuntu, and Twitter. We thank them for their work and contributions to the open source community.