This is the source of the website found at
http://astrohackweek.github.io/blog. The source lives in the master
branch and the built site lives in the gh-pages
branch.
Hack Week 2014 Participants: you can contribute a post by writing what you'd like to say either in markdown, restructured text, plain text, or an IPython notebook. If you're comfortable with github and the Pull Request system, that's the best way to do things. If not, then feel free to email your content to Jake, and he will post it for you!
We're hoping to get everyone written up on the blog at some point. See the PLAN, for the list of all bloggable hacks, in order of who's blogging next. Feel free to add yours if you don't see it!
Please feel free to email Jake or to file an Issue in this repository with any questions you have.
For those contributing via github, here are some tips:
For markdown, create a file in the posts/
subdirectory. You can model your file off posts/astro-hack-week-wrapup.md
. Note that the HTML at the top is optional: it just inserts the picture into the file. For a quick summary of using markdown, see the Daring Fireball guide
At the top of each markdown file is some blog metadata. You can modify that by hand with your post's title, author, date, etc. After adding your post to the directory, submit it as a pull request, and Jake will push it to the website!
You can export your hackpad to markdown by clicking on your profile picture or name on teh righthand sidebar, and then selecting "download as markdown" or somesuch. This will export all of the hackpads that you own to a zip archive, which you can unpack and then check in. It's nice to leave your hackpad in good shape, so this approach has some value.
If you have image files you'd like to include in your post, you can put them in the files/images
subdirectory, and reference them using an HTML tag (e.g. <img src="/images/HackWeek.jpg" width="300px">
).
This blog build system is set up to accept posts composed entirely in IPython notebook. All this requires is to put the notebook file in the posts/
subdirectory, and to add a metadata file. For example, the post within posts/multi-output-random-forests.ipynb
has metadata in posts/multi-output-random-forests.meta
. If you send a pull request containing your notebook plus an associated metadata file, Jake will be able to quickly publish your post to the web.
If you wish to build a copy of the site locally and check how your post will be displayed once it is published, you will first need to install the Nikola Python package and a few prerequisites. If you're using Anaconda for your Python setup, it can be done as follows:
[~]$ conda install ipython-notebook markdown jinja2 pip
[~]$ pip install nikola
Then you can build the site using
[~]$ nikola build
and preview using
[~]$ nikola serve
And point your browser to http://localhost:8000.
If you'd like to publish the site to http://astrohackweek.github.io/2014, then use nikola github_deploy
(Note: you need to be one of the site maintainers in order to do this).