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Contents

  • This session
    • Learning objectives
      • GitHub Advanced
      • Issues
    • city-guide project
    • Exercises
      • “Public” collaboration with pull requests (using a fork and GitHub Flow)
    • Slides

Git(Hub) with the world

Session 11

Starts at:

January 10 2025 (10:15 am)

Slides Chapter: GitHub - Advanced Chapter: Issues Quiz

This session

In this session, you will work on the following tasks:

  1. Reading: Read the chapter(s) “GitHub - Advanced” and “Issues” in the Version Control Book.
  2. Implementation: Try out the commands in the chapter.
  3. Exercises: Work on the exercises for the city-guide project.
  4. Quiz: Test your knowledge with the quiz.

As always:

  1. Try out the commands of this session and play around with them.
  2. Check whether you have achieved the learning objectives.
  3. Ask questions!
  4. Let’s git started!

Learning objectives

GitHub Advanced

💡 You know the purpose and components of a Pull Request.
💡 You know how to collaborate using the popular workflow strategy GitHub flow.
💡 You know the purpose and components of a README file.
💡 You can fork a repository.
💡 You can create a Pull Request from a forked repository.
💡 You can protect your main branch.

Issues

💡 You understand the purpose of GitHub Issues.
💡 You can create and manage Issues.
💡 You can reference an Issue in another issue.
💡 You can close an Issue with a commit or pull request.

city-guide project

At the end of this session, you should have accomplished the following:

  1. You contributed successfully to a public project by adding and committing changes to a forked repository.
  2. You created and reviewed a pull request to integrate new content from a fork.

Please keep the city-guide folder! We will continue to use it in the following sessions.

Exercises

“Public” collaboration with pull requests (using a fork and GitHub Flow)

  1. Find out what forking is.
  2. Fork the project repository of the course instructor or another course participant (ideally, someone who is not your collaborator from the previous exercise).
  3. Create an Issue in your new collaborator’s repository, indicating an entry that you think is still missing in their repository.
  4. Repeat the steps from the exercise on collaboration with remote repositories using the forked repository:
    1. Clone the forked repository to a sensible location on your computer.
    2. Create a new branch and make one or multiple commits “fixing” the Issue that you opened. If available, follow the contributing guide of your collaborator’s repository.
    3. Push your changes to the remote repository.
    4. Create a pull/merge request with your changes (hint: from the forked to the original repository) and refer to the Issue in your pull/merge request.

Slides

How can I download the slides as PDF?

To print the slides to PDF, do the following:

  1. Toggle into Print View using the E key (or using the Navigation Menu).
  2. Open the in-browser print dialog (CTRL/CMD+P).
  3. Change the Destination setting to Save as PDF.
  4. Change the Layout to Landscape.
  5. Change the Margins to None.
  6. Enable the Background graphics option.
  7. Click Save.

Note: This feature has been confirmed to work in Google Chrome, Chromium as well as in Firefox.

Here’s what the Chrome print dialog would look like with these settings enabled:

Screenshot of Chrome print dialog with the first slide/page of 43 shown on the left, and print options on the right. The Destination print option has Save as PDF selected.

These instructions were copied from the Quarto documentation (MIT License) and slightly modified.

© 2024 – 2025 Dr. Lennart Wittkuhn
  • Acknowledgements
License: CC BY 4.0