thisisnic commented on a change in pull request #11837:
URL: https://github.com/apache/arrow/pull/11837#discussion_r764252677
##########
File path: docs/source/developers/guide/step_by_step/pr_and_github.rst
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@@ -24,14 +24,168 @@
.. _pr_and_github:
-****************************
-Lifecycle of a Pull Request
-****************************
+******************************
+Lifecycle of a Pull Request 🙀
+******************************
+:ref:`As mentioned before<set-up>`, the Arrow project uses git for
+version control and a workflow based on Pull Requests. That means
+that you contribute the changes to the code by creating a branch
+in Git, make changes to the code, push the changes to your ``origin``
+which is your fork of the Arrow repository on GitHub and then you
+create a **Pull Request** against the official Arrow repository
+which is saved in your set up as ``upstream``.
-Creating a PR 🙀
-================
+You should have git set up by now, have cloned the repository,
+have successfully built Arrow and have an JIRA issue to work on.
+**Before making changes to the code, you should create a new
+branch in Git.**
-Reviews and get the PR merge 🎉
-===============================
\ No newline at end of file
+1. Update/sync the code from your ``upstream``
+ in the master branch. Run it in the shell from ``arrow`` directory.
+
+ .. code:: console
+
+ $ git checkout master
+ $ git fetch upstream
+ $ git pull --ff-only upstream master
+
+2. Create a new branch
+
+ .. code:: console
+
+ $ git checkout -b <branch-name>
+
+ or (does the same thing)
+
+ .. code:: console
+
+ $ git switch --create <branch-name>
+
+Now you can make changes to the code. To see the changes
+made in the library use this two commands:
+
+.. code:: console
+
+ $ git status # to see what files are changed
+ $ git diff # to see code change per file
+
+Creating a Pull Request
+=======================
+
+Once you are satisfied with the changes, run the :ref:`tests <testing>`
+and linters and then go ahead and commit the changes.
+
+3. Add and commit the changes
+
+ .. code:: console
+
+ $ git add <filenames>
+ $ git commit -m '<message>'
+
+ Or you can add and commit in one step, if all the files changed
Review comment:
```suggestion
Alternatively, you can add and commit in one step, if all the files
changed
```
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