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workshop-template

This repository is Software Carpentry and Data Carpentry's template for creating websites for workshops.

  1. Please do not fork this repository directly on GitHub. Instead, please use GitHub's importer following the instructions below to create a website repository for your workshop.

  2. Please do your work in your repository's gh-pages branch, since that is what is automatically published as a website by GitHub.

  3. Once you are done, please fill in this self-organized workshop form and the administrator will contact you if we need any extra information. We build the list of workshops on our websites from the data included in your index.html page. We can only do that if you customize that page correctly and fill in the form.

If you run into problems, or have ideas about how to make this process simpler, please get in touch. The pages on customizing your website, the FAQ, and the design notes have more detail on what we do and why. And please note: if you are teaching Git, please create a separate repository for your learners to practice in.

Creating a Repository

  1. Log in to GitHub. (If you do not have an account, you can quickly create one for free.) You must be logged in for the remaining steps to work.

  2. Go to GitHub's importer.

  3. Paste the url of this repo as the old repository to clone: https://github.com/swcarpentry/workshop-template.

  4. Select the owner for your new repository. (This will probably be you, but may instead be an organization you belong to.)

  5. Choose a name for your workshop website repository. This name should have the form YYYY-MM-DD-site, e.g., 2016-12-01-miskatonic, where YYYY-MM-DD is the start date of the workshop.

  6. Make sure the repository is public.

  7. At this point, you should have a page like this:

    You can now click "Begin Import". When the process is done, you will receive a message like "Importing complete! Your new repository gvwilson/2016-12-01-miskatonic is ready." and you can go to the new repository by clicking on the name.

Note: some people have had intermittent errors during the import process, possibly because of the network timing out. If you experience a problem, please re-try; if the problem persists, please get in touch.

Customizing Your Website

  1. Go into your newly-created repository, which will be at https://github.com/your_username/YYYY-MM-DD-site. For example, if your username is gvwilson, the repository's URL will be https://github.com/gvwilson/2016-12-01-miskatonic.

  2. Edit the header of index.html to customize the list of instructors, workshop venue, etc. You can do this in the browser by clicking on it in the file view on GitHub and then selecting the pencil icon in the menu bar:

    Editing hints are embedded in index.html, and full instructions are in the customization instructions.

  3. Alternatively, if you are already familiar with Git, you can clone the repository to your desktop, edit index.html there, and push your changes back to the repository.

    git clone -b gh-pages https://github.com/your_username/YYYY-MM-DD-site
    

    You should specify -b gh-pages because the imported repository doesn't have a master branch.

    In order to view your changes once you are done editing, you must push to your GitHub repository:

    git push origin gh-pages
    

    Note: please do all of your work in your repository's gh-pages branch, since GitHub automatically publishes that as a website.

  4. When you are done editing, go to the GitHub Pages URL for your workshop and preview your changes. In the example above, this is https://gvwilson.github.io/2016-12-01-miskatonic. The finished page should look something like this.

  5. Optional: you can now change the README.md file in your website's repository, which contains these instructions, so that it contains a short description of your workshop and a link to the workshop website.

Note: this template includes some files and directories that most workshops do not need, but which provide a standard place to put extra content if desired. See the design notes for more information about these.

Further instructions are available in the customization instructions. This FAQ includes a few extra tips (additions are always welcome) and these notes on the background and design of this template may help as well.

Checking Your Changes

If you want to preview your changes on your own machine before publishing them on GitHub, you can do so as described below.

  1. Install the software described below. This may require some work, so feel free to preview by pushing to the website.

  2. Run the command:

    $ jekyll serve
    

    and go to http://0.0.0.0:4000 to preview your site. You can also run this command by typing make serve (assuming you have Make installed).

  3. Run the command python bin/workshop_check.py index.html to check for a few common errors in your workshop's home page. (You must have Python 3 installed to do this.) If you have Make installed, you can also run this command by typing make workshop-check.

(Optional) Linking to Your Page

At the top of your repository on GitHub you'll see

No description or website provided. — Edit

Click 'Edit' and add:

  1. A very brief description of your workshop in the "Description" box (e.g., "Miskatonic University workshop, Dec. 2016")

  2. The URL for your workshop in the "Website" box (e.g., https://gvwilson.github.io/2016-12-01-miskatonic)

This will help people find your website if they come to your repository's home page.

Creating Extra Pages

In rare cases, you may want to add extra pages to your workshop website. You can do this by putting either Markdown or HTML pages in the website's root directory and styling them according to the instructions give in the lesson template. If you do this, you must also edit _config.yml to set these three values:

  1. carpentry is either "dc" (for Data Carpentry) or "swc" (for Software Carpentry). This determines which logos are loaded.

  2. title is the title of your workshop (typically the venue and date).

  3. email is the contact email address for your workshop, e.g., gvwilson@miskatonic.edu.

Note: carpentry and emailduplicate information that's inindex.html`, but there is no way to avoid this without requiring people to edit both files in the usual case where no extra pages are created.

Installing Software

If you want to set up Jekyll so that you can preview changes on your own machine before pushing them to GitHub, you must install the software described below. (Note: Julian Thilo has written instructions for installing Jekyll on Windows.)

  1. Ruby. This is included with Linux and Mac OS X; the simplest option on Windows is to use RubyInstaller. You can test your installation by running ruby --version. For more information, see the Ruby installation guidelines.

  2. RubyGems (the package manager for Ruby). You can test your installation by running gem --version.

  3. Jekyll. You can install this by running gem install jekyll.

You can check the formatting of your header by running bin/workshop_check.py (which is invoked by make workshop-check). You must have Python 3 installed in order to do this, and you will also need the PyYAML module.

Setting Up a Separate Repository for Learners

If you are teaching Git, you should create a separate repository for learners to use in that lesson. You should not have them use the workshop website repository because:

  • your workshop website repository contains many files that most learners don't need to see during the lesson, and

  • you probably don't want to accidentally merge a damaging pull request from a novice Git user into your workshop's website while you are using it to teach.

You can call this repository whatever you like, and add whatever content you need to it.

Getting and Giving Help

We are committed to offering a pleasant setup experience for our learners and organizers. If you find bugs in our instructions, or would like to suggest improvements, please file an issue or mail us.