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HacktoberFest-2023 🏆

About Hacktoberfest


Hackbook

OCT 14, 2023

Hello Hackers!

Looking for more ways to support the Community? Here are a few ideas:

👩‍💻 Continue in providing feedback on pull requests to help other hackers get their pull request ready to merge. We appreciate your help and love seeing the magic of social coding.

📪 Have patience. Our team is working hard to get through your pull requests and provide everyone with the feedback needed to join the event. GitHub Actions saved our team an enormous amount of time managing reviews this year but, as much as we love our automations, this is still a manual process to ensure the Code of Conduct is followed and the event can be enjoyed by all.

Banner

This repository contains the Hackbook. By issuing a pull request to this repository, you can request to be added to the Contributors.

Disclaimer 👀

Consider that all the information that you add to this repository will be publicly available.

How to Setup

1. Fork it 🍴

You can get your own fork/copy of Hackbook by using the Fork button on top-right of your screen.

2. Clone it 👥

NOTE: commands are to be executed on Linux, Mac, and Windows(using Powershell)

You need to clone (download) it to local machine using

$ git clone https://github.com/techhub-community/Hackbook.git

This makes a local copy of the repository in your machine. Once you have cloned the Hackbook repository in Github, move to that folder first using change directory command on Linux, Mac, and Windows(PowerShell to be used).

# This will change directory to a folder Hackbook
$ cd Hackbook

Move to this folder for all other commands.

3. Set it up ⬆️

Run the following commands to see that your local copy has a reference to your forked remote repository in Github :octocat:

$ git remote -v
origin  https://github.com/Your_Username/Hackbook.git (fetch)
origin  https://github.com/Your_Username/Hackbook.git (push)

Now, let's add a reference to the original Hackbook repository using

$ git remote add upstream https://github.com/techhub-community/Hackbook.git

This adds a new remote named upstream. See the changes using

$ git remote -v
origin    https://github.com/Your_Username/Hackbook.git (fetch)
origin    https://github.com/Your_Username/Hackbook.git (push)
upstream  https://github.com/Remote_Username/Hackbook.git (fetch)
upstream  https://github.com/Remote_Username/Hacktbook.git (push)

How to join the list

Add yourself to Hackbook 🏫

Replace <YOUR-USERNAME> with your GitHub username in this guide.

First, create the folder _data/YOUR-USERNAME/

Fork this repository, create a new folder inside the _data folder, and name it with your username. It should look something like this _data/<YOUR-USERNAME>/. Ex.

_data/MonaTheOctocat/

Second, add your profile information

Create a markdown file in your folder following the convention <YOUR-USERNAME>.md. Ex.

_data/MonaTheOctocat/MonaTheOctocat.md

Copy the next template into your file, delete the boilerplate data and fill the information with yours.

"name": "FULLNAME same as in github profile", # No longer than 28 characters
"quote": "YOUR-SENIOR-QUOTE", # no longer than 100 characters
"tech_stack": "YOUR-TECH-STACK" # mention any one or two skills only.

Do not use special characters in the template above.

Third, submit your Pull Request

Go through the checklist on the pull request template to guarantee your submission is valid. The Techhub team will review your application, approve and merge your submission if everything is correct. Otherwise, you will get notified of the changes requested in the pull request comment section.