Skip to content

cms-opendata-workshop/workshop2024-lesson-docker

Repository files navigation

The Carpentries Workbench Template Markdown Lesson

This lesson is a template lesson that uses The Carpentries Workbench.

Note about lesson life cycle stage

Although the config.yaml states the life cycle stage as pre-alpha, the template is stable and ready to use. The life cycle stage is preset to "pre-alpha" as this setting is appropriate for new lessons initialised using the template.

Create a new repository from this template

To use this template to start a new lesson repository, make sure you're logged into Github.
Visit https://github.com/cms-opendata-workshop/workbench-template-md/generate and follow the instructions. Checking the 'Include all branches' option will save some time waiting for the first website build when your new repository is initialised.

If you have any questions for DPOA, ask on Mattermost!. If you have any questions for the carpentries developer, contact @tobyhodges

Configure a new lesson

Follow the steps below to complete the initial configuration of a new lesson repository built from this template:

  1. Make sure GitHub Pages is activated: navigate to Settings, select Pages from the left sidebar, and make sure that gh-pages is selected as the branch to build from. If no gh-pages branch is available, check Actions to see if the first website build workflows are still running. The branch should become available when those have completed.
  2. Adjust the config.yaml file: this file contains global parameters for your lesson site. Individual fields within the file are documented with comments (beginning with #) At minimum, you should adjust all the fields marked 'FIXME':
    • title
    • created
    • keywords
    • life_cycle (the default, pre-alpha, is the appropriate for brand new lessons)
    • contact
  3. Annotate the repository with site URL and topic tags: navigate back to the repository landing page and click on the gear wheel/cog icon (similar to ⚙️) at the top-right of the About box. Check the "Use your GitHub Pages website" option, and add some keywords and other annotations to describe your lesson in the Topics field. At minimum, these should include:
    • lesson
    • the life cycle of the lesson (e.g. pre-alpha)
    • the human language the lesson is written in (e.g. deutsch)

Notes for CMS Open Data lessons

No attempt for a local build was made, and in principle, there is no need to install R or Pandoc. Note, however, that the content should be in Pandoc-flavored Markdown. If one wishes to test locally, the instructions are provided in The Carpentries Workbench documentation.

The setup instructions are in learners/setup.md and the separate pages under episodes.

The md-outputs branch shows after setting up the repository. No need to merge them.

The schedule shows only in the "Instructor view": https://cms-opendata-workshop.github.io/workshopqcd-2024-lesson-docker/instructor/index.html Use this link if you want to show it.

Updating an old lesson to the new template

There might be a tool somewhere, but if doing it by hand:

  1. Change questions (note the empty line after items), objectives and keypoints to

    :::::: questions
    - question 1
    - question 2
    
    ::::::
    
    :::::: objectives
    - objective 1
    - objective 2
    
    ::::::
    
    <!-- EPISODE CONTENT HERE -->
    
    :::::: keypoints
    - keypoint 1
    - keypoint 2
    ::::::
    
  2. Remove the double quotes of the question, objectives and keypoints.

  3. Make sure that keypoints are at the end of the text.

  4. Find all {: .callout}, {: .challenge}, {: .testimonial} etc tags and and remove the preceeding > for the block and change them to

    ::: callout
    This is a callout block. It contains at least three colons
    :::
    

    or

    ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: challenge
    
    ## Question
    
    Q: question
    
    :::::::::::::::: solution
    
    A: answer
    
    :::::::::::::::::::::::::
    :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
    

Documentation

See e.g.

Indents and unexpected code blocks

Note that double-indent (two tabs) or anything more that three spaces produces a code block. That's not necessarily what one would expect. Also, in some special cases, in nested lists, the second level items might appear as a code block.

Figures

Figures should be located under episodes/fig, and included, for example, with

![](fig/portal_screenshot_landing_page.png)

About

Pre-exercise computing setup lesson for CMS Open Data Workshop 2024

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published