ukrn-workshop
Science Score: 31.0%
This score indicates how likely this project is to be science-related based on various indicators:
-
✓CITATION.cff file
Found CITATION.cff file -
✓codemeta.json file
Found codemeta.json file -
○.zenodo.json file
-
○DOI references
-
○Academic publication links
-
○Academic email domains
-
○Institutional organization owner
-
○JOSS paper metadata
-
○Scientific vocabulary similarity
Low similarity (15.1%) to scientific vocabulary
Keywords
Repository
Basic Info
- Host: GitHub
- Owner: mcguinlu
- License: other
- Language: Python
- Default Branch: gh-pages
- Size: 2.99 MB
Statistics
- Stars: 0
- Watchers: 1
- Forks: 0
- Open Issues: 0
- Releases: 0
Topics
Metadata Files
README.md
The UKRN Open Research Workshop Template
This repository is The UKRN template for creating websites for Open Research Training workshops.
The easiest way to use this repository is to use the UKRN Workshop Builder. The Workshop Builder will walk you through constructing a workshop, allowing you to select and customise the lessons you include. At the end, you will have a website you can use to deliver the workshop to your participants. If you choose this approach, you can ignore the rest of this README. If you want to make custom changes later, you can always come back and read the information on customising your workshop.
You can use this template to build an entirely customised workshop manually.
To do so, please do not fork this repository directly on GitHub.
Instead, please use GitHub's "template" function following the instructions below to copy this workshop-template repository and customize it for your workshop.
If you run into problems, or have ideas about how to make this process simpler, please get in touch. The pages design notes have more detail on what we do and why.
Creating a Repository
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.
On this page (https://github.com/UKRN-Open-Research/workshop-template), click on the green "Use this template" button (top right)

Select the owner for your new repository. (This will probably be you, but may instead be an organization you belong to.)
Choose a name for your workshop website repository.
Make sure the repository is public, leave "Include all branches" unchecked, and click on "Create repository from template". You will be redirected to your new copy of the workshop template repository.
Your new website will be rendered at
https://your_username.github.io/repository-name. For example, if your username isgvwilsonand the name you chose in step 4 wasmy-university-open-code, the website's URL will behttps://gvwilson.github.io/my-university-open-code.When you're editing things, work in the
gh-pagesbranch, because this is automatically published as a website by GitHub.
If you experience a problem, please get in touch.
Customizing Your Website
There are two ways of customizing your website. You can either:
- edit the files directly in GitHub using your web browser
- clone the repository on your computer and update the files locally
Updating the files on GitHub in your web browser
Go into your newly-created repository, which will be at
https://github.com/your_username/repository-name. For example, if your username isgvwilsonand the name you chose in step 4 wasmy-university-open-code, the website's URL will behttps://gvwilson.github.io/my-university-open-code.Ensure you are on the gh-pages branch by clicking on the branch under the drop down in the menu bar (see the note below):

Edit the header of
index.mdto 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.md, and full instructions are in the customization instructions.Remove the notice about using the workshop template in the
index.mdfile. You can safely delete everything between the{% comment %}and{% endcomment %}(included) as indicated below (about from line 35 to line 51):```jekyll {% comment %} <------------ remove from this line 8< ============= For a workshop delete from here ============= For a workshop please delete the following block until the next dashed-line {% endcomment %}
....{% comment %} 8< ============================= until here ================== {% endcomment %} <--------- until this line ```
Edit
_config.ymlto customize certain site-wide variables, such as:carpentry(to tell your participants the lesson program for your workshop),curriculumandflavorfor the curriculum taught in your workshop, andtitle(overall title for all pages).Editing hints are embedded in
_config.yml, and full instructions are in the customization instructions.Edit the
schedule.htmlfile to edit the schedule for your upcoming workshop. This file is located in the_includesdirectory, make sure to choose the one from the appropriatedc(Data Carpentry workshop),lc(Library Carpentry), orswc(Software Carpentry) subdirectory.
Working locally
Note: you don't have to do this, if you have already updated your site using the web interface.
If you are already familiar with Git, you can clone the repository to your desktop, edit index.md,
_config.yml, and schedule.html following the instruction above there, and push your changes back to the repository.
shell
git clone https://github.com/your_username/YYYY-MM-DD-site
In order to view your changes once you are done editing, if you have bundler installed (see the installation instructions below), you can preview your site locally with:
shell
make serve
and go to http://0.0.0.0:4000 to preview your site.
Before pushing your changes to your repository, we recommend that you also check for any potential issues with your site by running:
shell
make workshop-check
Once you are satisfied with the edits to your site, commit and push the changes to your repository.
A few minutes later, you can go to the GitHub Pages URL for your workshop site and preview it. In the example above, this is https://gvwilson.github.io/2016-12-01-miskatonic. The finished
page should look something like this.
Update your repository description and link your website
At the top of your repository on GitHub you'll see
~~~ No description, website, or topics provided. — Edit ~~~
Click 'Edit' and add:
A very brief description of your workshop in the "Description" box (e.g., "Miskatonic University workshop, Dec. 2016")
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.
Update the content of the README file
You can 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.
Additional Notes
Note:
please do all of your work in your repository's gh-pages branch,
since GitHub automatically publishes that as a 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.
Creating Extra Pages
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.
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 in the lesson example setup instructions.
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.
Acknowledgements
This repository is adapted from The Carpentries' (Software Carpentry, Data Carpentry, and Library Carpentry's) template for creating websites for workshops. The Carpentries offer effective, focused workshops on practical research skills.
Owner
- Name: Luke McGuinness
- Login: mcguinlu
- Kind: user
- Location: Dublin, Ireland
- Website: https://mcguinlu.netlify.app/
- Twitter: mcguinlu
- Repositories: 11
- Profile: https://github.com/mcguinlu
Interests include data science, bias assessment, evidence synthesis + data visualisation.
Citation (CITATION)
Please cite as: Greg Wilson (ed): "Software Carpentry: Workshop Template." Version 2016.06, June 2016, https://github.com/carpentries/workshop-template, 10.5281/zenodo.58156.
GitHub Events
Total
Last Year
Issues and Pull Requests
Last synced: 11 months ago
All Time
- Total issues: 0
- Total pull requests: 0
- Average time to close issues: N/A
- Average time to close pull requests: N/A
- Total issue authors: 0
- Total pull request authors: 0
- Average comments per issue: 0
- Average comments per pull request: 0
- Merged pull requests: 0
- Bot issues: 0
- Bot pull requests: 0
Past Year
- Issues: 0
- Pull requests: 0
- Average time to close issues: N/A
- Average time to close pull requests: N/A
- Issue authors: 0
- Pull request authors: 0
- Average comments per issue: 0
- Average comments per pull request: 0
- Merged pull requests: 0
- Bot issues: 0
- Bot pull requests: 0
Top Authors
Issue Authors
Pull Request Authors
Top Labels
Issue Labels
Pull Request Labels
Dependencies
- PyYAML *
- beautifulsoup4 *
- git_root *
- github-pages >= 0 development