Get Involved by Joining the Growing Ember.js Community

In a Giving Mood? Contribute to the Project

The Ember.js source is hosted on Github. To contribute patches, create a fork of the project on GitHub and submit a pull request. Please be sure to include unit tests and documentation for any new features you add. See the full guidelines for more information.

Something Fishy? Report it to the Team

If you've found a bug or issue in Ember.js, please let us know. To file a bug, go to the issue tracker and create a new issue. Great bug reports include a clear description of what is not happening and what you expected to happen. Issues that include a failing test or a reduced test case created on JSFiddle or JSBin are much more likely to receive attention. See the full guidelines for more information.

Please do not report security vulnerabilities on the public GitHub issue tracker. The Ember.js Security Policy details the procedure for disclosing security issues.

The source code for this website is also available on GitHub. If you have found a typo or incorrect documentation, please file an issue on the GitHub project page, or even better, submit a pull request.

Stuck? Lost? Get Help from the Community

StackOverflow is used to track questions. Just tag your question with ember.js or search for questions with that tag. Please check to see if your question has already been answered before asking a new one.

You can participate in our discussion forum, which is a great venue for discussing features, architecture and best practices.

You can also check out our IRC channel at #emberjs on freenode.net.

Looking to Learn? Videos n' More!

Ember is a new and growing community, and we're working to create learning resources as fast as we can. Here are some useful places to look for content other than our documentation:

...and lastly, there are screencasts and videos sprinkled throughout the docs.