The Django Girls Tutorial is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 license. Everyone is free to add, edit and correct the tutorial.
The source code of the tutorial is hosted on Github. The Github Fork & Pull workflow is used to accept and review changes.
The tutorial uses the GitBook service for publishing its documentation. See more information about how Gitbook works.
The tutorial is written in Markdown mark up language.
You can find any discussions about the contents of the tutorial on the Github issue tracker.
For contributing to the tutorial the following is needed to get started:
- a Github account
- in the case of complex edits familiarity with Git command line basics or familiarity with an app (Windows, Mac) to push your edits made on your computer to Github.
First fork the DjangoGirls/tutorial repository to your personal Github account:
For simple changes like typo corrections you can use the Github online editor:
- Open your local fork page on Github,
- go to README.md file in any chapter,
- press the Edit icon (pen)
and you can edit the chapter directly on github.com.
Markdown syntax is used to edit the individual pages of the tutorial.
Save your changes and create a pull request as explained below.
For adding new chapters, writing longer snippets of text or adding images, you need to get a copy of the tutorial to your local computer.
Either use the Github app for your operating system (mentioned above) or git
command line to get the repository locally. You get the repository address from the front page of your own Github repository fork:
git clone git@github.com:yourgithubusername/tutorial.git
Download the Gitbook Editor app to your computer.
Then you can open the tutorial in Gitbook Editor (File > Open book).
Make any changes in the tutorial using Gitbook and then save changes (Book > Save all).
Then commit the changes using git
and push the changes to your remote Github repository.
Example:
$ git status
On branch contributing
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
contributing_and_editing_this_book/images/gitbook.png
$ git add contributing_and_editing_this_book/images/gitbook.png
$ git commit -m "Added gitbook editor screenshot"
[contributing fe36152] Added gitbook screenshot
1 file changed, 0 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
create mode 100644 contributing_and_editing_this_book/images/gitbook.png
$ git push
Counting objects: 11, done.
Delta compression using up to 8 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (5/5), done.
Writing objects: 100% (5/5), 266.37 KiB | 0 bytes/s, done.
Total 5 (delta 1), reused 0 (delta 0)
To git@github.com:miohtama/tutorial.git
b37ca59..fe36152 contributing -> contributing
If you don't want to download the Gitbook Editor app you can also go to the Gitbook website, sign up for free and work directly in your browser.
After you have finished your changes you need to create a pull request on Github. DjangoGirls will get notified about the pull request, review your changes, suggest any corrections if needed and then pull your changes to the master version.
In your own repository on Github press do Compare & pull request
Fill in the information why this change is being made. The reviewer can see the details of the actual change, so you don't need repeat the content of the change.
Then press Create pull request.
Github emails will notify you for the follow up process.
GitHub has an excellent documentation. Check it out if you need help!
For further questions please contact DjangoGirls.