Sunday 1 April 2018 photo 8/15
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Github tutorial: >> http://qda.cloudz.pw/download?file=github+tutorial << (Download)
Github tutorial: >> http://qda.cloudz.pw/read?file=github+tutorial << (Read Online)
30 Sep 2013 As embarrassing as it is to admit, this tutorial came into being because all of the “GitHub for Beginners" articles I read were way over my head. That's probably because I don't have a strong programming background, like most GitHub users. I couldn't identify with the way most tutorials suggest using GitHub,
Learn how to use Git with Code School's interactive course, Try Git.
1 Oct 2015 In August, we hosted a Women Who Code meetup at HubSpot and led a workshop for beginners on using git and GitHub. I first walked through a slide presentation on the basics and background of git and then we broke out into groups to run through a tutorial I created to simulate working on a large,
12 Jan 2016 You can also see that I'm going to submit a merge request (pull request) from my head fork of “shadowcodex/tutorials" to the base fork of “pluralsight/tutorials." Next, I'll hit the green “Create pull request" button and submit it. 22_compare. Next, I'll be asked to title and comment my pull request. GitHub was
16 Jan 2014
Learn the basics of Git through this comprehensive Git training. Branching, pull requests, merging and more are covered in the Atlassian Git tutorial.
This tutorial explains how to import a new project into Git, make changes to it, and share changes with other developers. If you are instead primarily interested in using Git to fetch a project, for example, to test the latest version, you may prefer to start with the first two chapters of The Git User's Manual. First, note that you can
Learn how to use GitHub - Explore repositories, forks, branches, creating issues and wikis, automation, and using the command line.
7 Apr 2016 GitHub is a code hosting platform for version control and collaboration. It lets you and others work together on projects from anywhere. This tutorial teaches you GitHub essentials like repositories, branches, commits, and Pull Requests. You'll create your own Hello World repository and learn GitHub's Pull
I would like all of my statistical/computational collaborators to use git and github, so that we may collaborate more easily. But for statisticians with no history of use of version control, it can be hard to get started. This is a tutorial of sorts, to help. Saunak Sen got me started with version control (using subversion), and Pjotr Prins
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