Skip to content

karthikrayaprolu/open-source-practice

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

RepoRater

Note: This repository is not included in the Hacktoberfest event, as it is for practice only!

We have other repositories in the organization that you can contribute to. If you would like to join our GitHub organisation, raise an issue on this repo EddieHubCommunity-Support and you can also join the EddieHub Discord channel


Hacktoberfest

What is it? Click on the poster below to watch the video for more details đź“˝

Watch The Video

Contributor Covenant Gitpod Ready-to-Code

open-source-practice Pull Requests

Repository for you to raise a Pull Request to practice open-source! 🎉

Add your name to the alphabetical list and, optionally, a link to your GitHub account (in alphabetical order below your letter too)

Option 1. Complete this process in GitHub (in your browser)

flowchart LR
    Fork[Fork the project]-->branch[Create a New Branch]
    branch-->Edit[Edit file]
    Edit-->commit[Commit the changes]
    commit -->|Finally|creatpr((Create a Pull Request))
Loading

1. Fork the project:

  • Click the gray Fork button at the top right of this page. This creates your copy of the project and saves it as a new repository in your GitHub account.

2. Create a New Branch:

  • On your new repository's page, click the gray main button in the upper left to reveal a dropdown menu.
  • Enter the name of your new branch in the text box. (Branch names usually refer to what is being changed. Example: nameAdd). -Click on Create branch , which will automatically take you to your new branch. You can make edits on the main branch, but this may cause issues down the line. The best practice is to create a new branch for each separate issue you work on. That way your main branch remains in sync with Eddie's main branch.

3. Edit:

  • On the top right of the Readme file, click on the pencil icon to edit the file by adding your name and your GitHub profile link to the section that matches your Initial in this list. Make sure that your name is in alphabetical order.
  • After editing the Readme file, add a commit message and click on the green button saying "Commit Changes". Make sure you have selected the branch you have created.

4. Raise a Pull Request:

  • Click Pull Requests option in your forked repository (which is the third option at the top of this page after the options Code and Issues).
  • Click the green New Pull Request button. This will prep the new pull request for you by auto-filling the base repository: base with 'EddieGitHubCommunity: main' AND auto-filling your head repository: compare with your repository: main
  • Click on your head repository's compare dropdown, and switch branches from your 'main' branch to <new branch name>.
  • Finally, click the green Create Pull Request button. Great job! You did it!

You can ask questions by raising an issue.

Option 2. Complete this process on your computer (locally)

1. Fork the project:

  • Click the gray Fork button at the top right of this page. This creates your copy of the project and saves it as a new repository in your GitHub account.

2. Clone this project on your computer:

  • Go to your profile. You will find forked repo named open-source-practice. go to the repo by clicking on it.

  • Click on the green Code button, then either the HTTPS or SSH option, and, click the icon to copy the URL. Now you have a copy of the project. Thus, you can play around with it locally on your computer.

  • Run the following commands into a terminal window (Command Prompt, Powershell, Terminal, Bash, ZSH). Do this to download the forked copy of this repository to your computer. git-clone

  git clone https://github.com/YOUR_GITHUB_USERNAME/hacktoberfest-practice.git
  • Switch to the cloned folder. You can paste this command into the same terminal window. opening-vscode
  cd hacktoberfest-practice

3. Create a new branch:

  • Your username would make a good branch because it's unique. git-checkout
  git checkout -b <name-of-new-branch>

4. Edit:

  • Open the README.md file

  • Add your name to the section that matches your Initial in this list, make sure that your name is in alphabetical order. Then save your changes.

  • For example - [Full Name](https://github.com/your-username)

5. Stage your changes:

  git add README.md

or

  git add .

6. Commit the changes: git-commit

  git commit -m "Add <your-github-username>"
  • Check the status of your repository.
  git status
  • The response should be like this: git-status
On branch <name-of-your-branch>
nothing to commit, working tree clean

7. Pushing your repository to GitHub:

  git push origin <name-of-your-branch>

or

  git branch -M main
  git push -u origin main

git-push

Warning: If you get an error message like the one below, you probably forgot to fork the repository before cloning it. It is best to start over and fork the project repository first.

ERROR: Permission to EddieHubCommunity/hacktoberfest-practice.git denied to <your-github-username>.
fatal: Could not read from remote repository.
Please make sure you have the correct access rights and that the repository exists.

8. Raise a Pull Request:

  • On the GitHub website, navigate to your forked repo - on the top of the files section, you'll notice a new section containing a Compare & Pull Request button! createpr

  • Click on that button, this will load a new page, comparing the local branch in your forked repository against the main branch in the EddieHub Hacktoberfest repository. Do not make any changes in the selected values of the branches (do so only if needed), and click the green Create Pull Request button. After creating the PR (Pull Request), our GitHub Actions workflow will add a welcome message to your PR. Note: A pull request allows us to merge your changes with the original project repo.

  • Your pull request will be reviewed and then eventually merged.

Hurray! You successfully made your first contribution! 🎉


How can I fix a merge conflict?

A GitHub conflict is when people make changes to the same area or line in a file. This must be fixed before it is merged to prevent collision in the main branch.


Hacktoberfest Community

Contents

| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z | 0-9 |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

  • Q

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

| Back To Top |

Our Pledge

We take participation in our community as a harassment-free experience for everyone and we pledge to act in ways to contribute to an open, welcoming, diverse and inclusive community.

If you have experienced or been made aware of unacceptable behaviour, please remember that you can report this. Read our Code of Conduct.

About

Repo for you to raise a Pull Request for practice

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published