Contribute
Antiluma is built in the open, and every project is developed with long-term usability, maintainability, and public value in mind.
Our GitHub organization is the best place to explore active projects, review open issues, understand current priorities, and contribute directly. Whether you are fixing a bug, improving documentation, proposing new ideas, or strengthening system design, contributions are most valuable when they follow clear standards and align with project goals.
We care deeply about best practices. Good contributions are not just about adding more—they are about improving quality. That means writing maintainable code, documenting clearly, respecting project architecture, and following each repository's contributing guidelines before opening issues or pull requests.
Who Can Contribute
Antiluma welcomes contributors from different disciplines.
Developers can help build products, improve APIs, strengthen infrastructure, and refine performance. Designers can improve usability and accessibility. Researchers, health professionals, and policy experts can provide practical domain insight that keeps projects grounded in real-world systems. Technical writers and educators can make projects easier to understand, adopt, and extend.
If your work improves clarity, reliability, or usefulness, it can contribute meaningfully.
How to Contribute
Start by visiting the Antiluma GitHub organization and exploring available repositories. Each project includes its own documentation, roadmap, and contribution guidelines.
Before contributing:
- Read the project README
- Review the CONTRIBUTING.md guide
- Check existing issues and discussions
- Follow coding standards and architectural patterns
- Prioritize clarity, maintainability, and practical utility
Small improvements matter just as much as large ones when they are thoughtful and well-executed.
Build Responsibly
Antiluma projects are intended to solve real problems. Contributions should reflect that responsibility.
We encourage contributors to think beyond implementation and consider sustainability, usability, and the broader systems these tools support. Open source works best when collaboration is disciplined, transparent, and focused on building things that last.
Explore the organization, follow the guide, and contribute where you can create meaningful impact.