The Library Carpentry module 'Introduction to programming with Python' is maintained by Konrad Foerstner, Drew Heles, Elizabeth Wickes, Laura Wrubel, Carlos Martinez and Richard Vankoningsveld.
The maintainers of this lesson are currently working on a substantial redesign of this lesson. This means than large portions of the current lesson content will be removed or substantially rewritten. You are welcome to submit pull requests for changes that help make this lesson better in the short run, but please keep in mind that the changes you make may be on content slated for removal.
Library Carpentry is a software skills training programme aimed at library and information professions. It builds on the work of Software Carpentry and Data Carpentry.
Library Carpentry is in the commons and for the commons. It is not tied to any institution of person. For more information on Library Carpentry, see our website librarycarpentry.org.
There are many ways of contributing to Library Carpentry:
- Join our Gitter discussion forum.
- Follow updates on Twitter.
- Make a suggestion or correct an error by raising an Issue.
If you wish to contribute changes or additions to this module, you'll want to setup a local development environment that allows you to easily test changes locally. In order to do this, you'll want to do the following:
- Fork this repository
- Clone your fork of the repository:
git clone https://github.com/<your-github-username>/lc-python-intro.git
- Install Ruby
- Install Jekyll
gem install jekyll
- Run the Jekyll server locally
cd <path-to>/lc-python-intro
make serve
- Browse to your local server: http://localhost:4000/
- The
Makefile
has other options as well. To see them typemake
All participants should agree to abide by the Software Carpentry Code of Conduct.
Library Carpentry is authored and maintained by the community.
Please cite as:
Library Carpentry. Introduction to programming with Python. 2017. https://librarycarpentry.org/lc-python-intro/.