/backend-curriculum-site

A site for all curriculum and day to day for the backend program at Turing School of Software and Design

Primary LanguageHTML

Turing School of Software and Design

Site for the Back End Engineering Program

This site is built with Jekyll. Find the docs here

Contributing

  • Clone the repo git clone git@github.com:turingschool/backend-curriculum-site.git

  • run bundle install

  • You can now begin to edit the website.

  • To start the server run jekyll serve --incremental.

  • Navigate to localhost:4000 to see the site

  • make changes on the gh-pages branch.

  • you can push changes to production by pushing the gh-pages branch to github. git push origin gh-pages.

  • The changes may take a minute or two to be recognized on production. Please make sure you review your changes on production.

Structure of the site and where to find the most important things:

You will find a module specific directory. eg module1 and within each directory you will find a directory for lessons and projects. All files within this site can be written as either markdown or html. To link to each you just need to write the relative path to each file without the file extension. For example lessons/lesson_on_stuff.

The navigation.html file is where you will find the sidebar for the site.

The today.html file is where you will find the basic html page for today, and each file for the specific day will live within the today directory.

Some handy tips for editing/creating content

Headers in your markdown files

Put something like this at the top of all your markdown files:

---
title: Name of lesson
subheading: lesson is about stuff
layout: page
---
  • subheading is optional
  • layout is basically always going to be page

Index.md instead of Readme.md

The system we're using to translate from github to backend.turing.io uses index files instead of readme files. Where you would have created a file called readme.md, just use index.md instead

Links and Paths

When linking to a markdown file, drop the .md in your link. Instead of linking to learning_to_pair.md, just use learning_to_pair. Other files, like PDFs and PNGs, keep the original extension.

Absolute vs Relative paths

Since you're editing on github, and viewing at backend.turing.io, you'll probably want to use relative links instead of absolute links. I found a primer on the difference. It's in the context of HTML instead of Markdown, but should basically explain the concept: http://www.boogiejack.com/server_paths.html

Your markdown will behave differently

Github uses a slightly different system for translating from Markdown than the engine we use for backend.turing.io. Here's some things that I had to change to get things to look right on the site, even if it looks right on Github.

  • Put a space after your #'s in headers
  • Put a blank line between your headers and any content below
  • Replace any | with \| unless you're really trying to do a table