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HEY YEAH #18

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13 of 22 tasks
XIAOJUANGU opened this issue Oct 3, 2024 · 6 comments
Open
13 of 22 tasks

HEY YEAH #18

XIAOJUANGU opened this issue Oct 3, 2024 · 6 comments

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@XIAOJUANGU
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XIAOJUANGU commented Oct 3, 2024

Week 2: Your first repository

  • 1. Install GitHub desktop and connect it to your GitHub account
  • 2. Create a public repository and add a readme file
  • 3. Publish the repository to GitHub
  • 4. Add a new file in your local repository, commit the file addition, and push it to the remote repository on GitHub
  • 5. Modify the new file (or the Readme file), commit the change, and push it to the remote repository on GitHub
  • 6. Comment on this issue with a link to your repository

Week 4: Rmarkdown

  • 1. Create a new public repository on GitHub Desktop and add a readme file.
  • 2. Publish the repository to GitHub
  • 3. Open RStudio and create a new project in an existing directory (the directory of your repository)
  • 4. Download the file "R_Rstudio_Rmarkdown.Rmd" from the week 4 "Practical: R markdown" section on MyAberdeen and save it in your project
  • 5. Work through the Rmarkdown file, remembering to commit and push your changes to the remote repository on GitHub
  • 6. Optional: if you have questions you'd like to discuss with your group members, create issues on GitHub and let them know
  • 7. Comment on this issue with a link to your new repository

Week 5: Practical: reading data in R

  • 1. Create a new public repository on GitHub Desktop and add a readme file. This will be the main repository for the R material from this course, so give it a good name 😃
  • 2. Publish the repository to GitHub
  • 3. Open RStudio and create a new project in an existing directory (the directory of your repository)
  • 4. Create an appropriate folder structure according to the good coding practices discussed in week 5
  • 5. Download the data files and Rmarkdown file from the week 5 "Practical: reading data in R" section on MyAberdeen and save them in the appropriate folders in your project
  • 6. Work through the Rmarkdown file, remembering to commit and push your changes to the remote repository on GitHub
  • 7. Optional: if you have questions you'd like to discuss with your collaborators, create issues on GitHub and let them know
  • 8. Comment on this issue with a link to your new repository

Week 6-10: Your project
Now that you have become familiar with GitHub, you can start using it to prepare your report, and get help and feedback from your group members.

  • Comment on this issue with a link to your report repository
@XIAOJUANGU
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@XIAOJUANGU
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@XIAOJUANGU
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@dblana
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dblana commented Oct 25, 2024

@XIAOJUANGU please make sure your repository is public 😃

@XIAOJUANGU
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Hey, Dr Dimitra Blana
Here, it's my practice, all of these steps I've finished. Please check it, thanks! https://github.com/XIAOJUANGU/RS-Praperation.git

@dblana
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dblana commented Nov 5, 2024

Hi @XIAOJUANGU, now you're moving into week 5 (and beyond), there are a lot of files in your repository. Try to put your files in folders according to the good coding practices discussed in the course material. Don't ty to do this on GitHub itself, do it locally on your computer, then commit and "push" your changes to GitHub.

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