You are an internal developer if you have writing permissions to the repository.
Most feature branches are never pushed to the repo, only do so if you expect that its development will take days (to avoid losing your work if you computer is damaged). Otherwise follow the following instructions to locally rebase your feature branch into `develop` and push those rebased changes online.
**Starting your feature branch**
1. Pull the latest develop
```bash
git checkout develop
git pull
```
1. Create your feature branch
```bash
git checkout -b feature/feature1
```
1. Add, modify or delete the necessary files to add your new feature
1. Update the [change log](../../change-log) (`docs/change-log.md`)
2. Stage and commit your changes using VS Code git GUI or the following commands
```bash
git add modified-file1 modified-file2
git commit -m "Add my new feature" # use a concise description
```
**Merging back your feature branch**
If your changes took time to be implemented it is possible that there are new commits in our `develop` branch, so we need to rebase your feature branch.
1. Fetch the latest changes to develop
```bash
git fetch origin develop
```
1. Rebase your feature branch
```bash
git checkout feature/feature1
git rebase -i develop
```
1. Integrate your new feature to `develop`
```bash
git checkout develop
git merge --no-ff feature/feature1 # (use the default merge message)
git push origin develop
git branch -d feature/feature1
```
=== "External Developer"
You are an external developer if you do NOT have writing permissions to the repository.
**Starting your feature branch**
1. Fork and clone our repository on Github
1. Switch to the latest develop
```bash
git checkout develop
```
1. Create your feature branch
```bash
git checkout -b feature/external-test
```
1. Add, modify or delete the necessary files to add your new feature
2. Stage and commit your changes using VS Code git GUI or the following commands
```bash
git add modified-file1 modified-file2
git commit -m "Add my new feature" # use a concise description
```
**Merging back your feature branch**
If your changes took time to be implemented, it is possible that there are new commits in our `develop` branch, so we need to rebase your feature branch.