Skip to content

eflynn90/github_tutorial

 
 

Repository files navigation

Online Collaboration with Git and GitHub

GitHub

Sign up or use an existing account if you have one.

Set up git

Fork

Create a fork of this repository under your account (see forking).

Clone your fork

At the command line, enter the following:

git clone <your-fork-url>

Create a branch

Within your fork, create a branch whose name is your UNI. All your work should be maintained on this branch.

git checkout -b <your-uni>

Add your Markdown page

Create a new Markdown file under the /people directory whose name is your UNI and file extension is .md. For example, if your UNI were ab9876, the file would be /people/ab9876.md.

On this page describe your academic/professional interests or projects you are currently working on in under 500 words. The following variables must be defined in the front matter:

---
layout: people
github_username: <your-github-username>
last_name: <your-last-name>
first_name: <your-first-name>
permalink: /people/<your-uni>/
---

After you've saved the file, add it to staging:

git add /path/to/people/ab9876.md

This is now included on the list of changes to commit.

Commit changes

In your commit message, state the page that was added. Below is an example of what the command should look like (see Git Commit Best Practices).

git commit -m "Add page `/people/ab9876.md`"

Push commits

Your changes so far have been local. The following command pushes them to a new branch on your fork:

git push origin <your-uni>

Create a pull request

Create a pull request from the branch on your fork to the master branch on the origin repository (see Creating a pull request from a fork).

After the majority of students have successfully created a pull request, the instructor will demonstrate the merged result.

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 48.9%
  • CSS 34.3%
  • HTML 11.4%
  • Shell 3.1%
  • Ruby 2.3%