This project is participating in Hacktoberfest as a part of the Mozilla Open Leaders Program. We welcome contributions as detailed here and new potential maintainers. We are happy to help you improve your contributions to make a quality contribution. There is a lot of information below including in the links provided to help you make a high quality contribution. Work in progress PRs or comments on issues are both great ways to avoid duplication of effort.
This project is a part of the Mozilla Open leaders Program as, "Good Enough Open Source Practices for Python Data Analysis Projects." Through this project sprint the goal is to gather the necessary information and get an outline and preliminary materials gathered to facilitate an initial pilot run of the workshop.
This is to be a collaboration among scientific computing researchers and educators to develop accessible tutorial materials and minimal templates that empower researchers developing new analysis techniques to release them in formats that encourage community adoption. We're working open to model the practices that the lesson teaches. By working open, we hope to increase the impact of the templates and tutorials by encouraging learners to contribute back.
This tutorial will cover some next steps for getting your python-based data analysis project organized and ready to share. See the learner profiles with collaborators or in general. What differentiates this project from others is that it aims to specifically target minimal effort, maximal benefit open source practices to help researchers who want to share their work with minimal overhead.
This lesson is in early development as a part of the Mozilla Open Leaders Cohort 6 and participating in Hacktoberfest. For Hacktoberfest, please check the Hacktoberfest label on issues and the roadmap Maintainers will do their best to help you if you have any questions, concerns, or experience any difficulties along the way.
This project is not an official project of the Carpentries, but it is inspired by the Carpentries. We adopt the Carpentries Code of Conduct, but reporting should be to the maintainers of this project. The style guide of the Carpentries below also applies to this project.
We'd like to ask you to familiarize yourself with our Contribution Guide and have a look at the [more detailed Carpentries guidelines][lesson-example] on proper formatting, ways to render the lesson locally, and even how to write new episodes.
- Sarah M Brown (@Brownsarahm)
A list of contributors to the lesson can be found in AUTHORS