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Contributing to training-kit

🎉 Thank you for taking the time to contribute and for seeking out these instructions. We ❤️ community contributions to these materials.

Table of Contents

Code of Conduct

I just want to see the published resources!

What should I know before I contribute?

How to contribute

Step-by-step contribution guide


Code of Conduct

This project and everyone who participates in it is governed by the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code. Please report unacceptable behavior to [email protected].


What should I know before I get started?

The goal of these resources

These materials are designed to help those new to Git, GitHub and software development as a whole. By using these resources, we hope users will:

  • Feel welcome and become active contributors in the open source community
  • Complete hands-on activities and receive immediate support from Teacherbot, members of the community, and GitHub's Training team
  • Learn best practices for using Git, GitHub and other GitHub supported projects such as Electron, Atom, etc
  • Learn how to use the applications within GitHub's ecosystem to build better software

Types of contributions we love

We're always looking for contributions to help improve these resources. This includes:

  • Improving the existing classes and resources
  • Translations of existing resources such as the cheatsheets into new languages
  • Adding new classes or resources aligned with the goals

How to contribute

Report a bug

Oops, thanks for finding that! If you know how to fix it, please feel free to fork the repository and submit a change via Pull Request (Not sure how to do that? We have a course for you).

If you aren't sure how to fix it or just don't have time, we invite you to open a new Issue. Please be sure to provide information so we can recreate the error.

Translate existing resources

Several community members have been kind enough to translate the Git Cheat Sheets into various languages. At this time, we are only set up to serve the cheat sheets in various languages (but maybe you can help us change that 😉) If you are planning to contribute a translation, please do the following:

  • Fork this repository
  • Create a new folder in the downloads directory using the standard abbreviation for the language you are providing.
  • Copy the most recent English version of the cheatsheet to the folder you created.
  • Complete the translation
  • Add a link to the translated resource on /resources/cheatsheets/index.html
  • Open a pull request against the master branch of this repository.
  • Be sure to @ mention a couple of your friends who are native speakers and ask them to review the translation.
  • Update your translation based on feedback from your friends.

When this process is complete, we will be happy to merge the completed document.

Contribute something new

Whether you have an idea to make it better, or want to contribute a whole new course or resource ... we ❤️ new ideas! We invite you to open a new Issue to talk about it before you invest too much time. Of course, if you want to experiment first, you can fork this repository and submit your idea via a Pull Request.

When you are contributing something new, we ask you to be familiar with our content philosophy, the structure of the repository, and building Jekyll sites locally. See the sections below for more information.

Not sure where to start?

If you just want to help out, but don't have a particular change in mind, check out the open issues for projects you can tackle, review an open pull request, or check out the project ROADMAP.


Step-by-step contribution guide

Our content philosophy

We are eager to create materials that are easy to use and follow! To that end, here are a few guidelines we ask you to keep in mind:

  • We focus on providing friendly and clear, step-by-step instructions.
  • Courses should include a project repository that allows each students to complete an activity.
  • We focus on minimalism in our instructions, giving the learner the opportunity to study the concept in greater detail with the Tell Me Why feature.
  • We appeal to multiple learning styles. Some learners like to read, some like to watch videos, and others just want a recipe.

Content structure

This repository contains two major collections: on-demand training courses and listings of our favorite resources. We help users navigate these collections sequentially with the learning path.

On-demand course structure

Adding an on-demand course requires you to do the following:

Writing new content

If you are contributing content, stay consistent with the existing courses by following these guidelines.

  • Vocabulary is italicized to help learners identify their importance and help with cognition.
    • Example: A query is a request for specific information.
  • Button names are bolded to indicate they should be clicked.
    • Example: Accept the filler text and click Commit Changes.
  • Names of repositories, files, branches, variables, or user handles are wrapped in `backticks`.
    • Example: Initialize the repository with a README.md file.
  • Code that the learner should type, copy, or execute should be in a fenced code block:
    • Example: To see the version of your Git installation, type:

        git --version
      
  • Use given names for complicated concepts, and then explain them. After you've explained them once, use only the given name.
    • Example: Any Electron app has 2 types of processes: the main process, initialized by package.json, and a renderer process generated by each web page [...] Running src/index.js runs the app's main process.
  • Use relevant descriptions of your links, and avoid "click here".

Styling content

This site uses GitHub's CSS toolkit called Primer. It's easy to use, and if your contribution requires some design or front-end work you should check out the Primer Docs.

Building and testing

When you are ready to test your changes, you will want to build the repository locally. This is fully automated through a series of shell scripts based the scripts to rule them all!

To build of the materials do the following:

  1. Run script/setup
  2. Run sass --watch assets/_scss/main.scss:assets/css/main.css to compile the SCSS
  3. Run script/server
    • When successful, the script will initiate a local server at http://127.0.0.1:4000/on-demand.
    • The /on-demand/ directory is a result of the baseurl variable provided by Jekyll. If you'd like to serve your site under a different directory, change it in _config.yml.
  4. Simply paste that into your favorite web-browser and you will be ready to test