The repo left some community files like codeowners, code of conduct and files like that. Seeing a repo with these files makes the repo more "profresionalish?". It's cool have some of these
How
So, in this PR I added the following files which are listed on the task BUT I added some extra for juciness ;)
2 templates for posting issues: 1 for bugs and 1 for request features
A codewoner file
A funding file
A pull request template with a form
A code of conduct file
A contributing file
A support file
A security file
Some of them are modified copies from various repositories ( which I don't remmember the users :( ) and the others are created by the github tool.
Usage
Most of them are used by github automatically. Only the funding one needs a check on the repo config by the admin repo for full activation. The check are located at "repo settings" -> General -> Features -> Sponsorships
Why
The repo left some community files like codeowners, code of conduct and files like that. Seeing a repo with these files makes the repo more "profresionalish?". It's cool have some of these
How
So, in this PR I added the following files which are listed on the task BUT I added some extra for juciness ;)
Some of them are modified copies from various repositories ( which I don't remmember the users :( ) and the others are created by the github tool.
Usage
Most of them are used by github automatically. Only the funding one needs a check on the repo config by the admin repo for full activation. The check are located at "repo settings" -> General -> Features -> Sponsorships
See more information https://help.github.com/en/github/administering-a-repository/displaying-a-sponsor-button-in-your-repository for enable the button
Tests
Checked and tested on a private repository.
Tasks related
2