Her own projects that I used as inspiration are here: https://github.com/WhitakerLab/WhitakerLabProjectManagement … No tutorial as far as I know (cc @kirstie_j )
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I like the
@MozillaScience tutorial: https://kirstiejane.github.io/friendly-github-intro … but this one from@github is pretty fun too: https://try.github.io . And@o_guest has a fun cheat sheet http://neuroplausible.com/github1 reply 1 retweet 7 likes -
Replying to @kirstie_j @ChrisMCastille and
Oh, thanks. My post on git/github is definitely a good starting point if you have done nothing with git/github. Something more advanced might be needed if you're already puling and pushing as I do not mention PRs or branching, etc.
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Replying to @o_guest @kirstie_j and
Yes I know this one and it's been helpful for Github in general! But I meant more how to organize a project, what should be done where (issues, wiki etc) does that make sense?
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Replying to @DrVeronikaCH @vcheplygina and
That's very project-dependent. What kind of project, LaTeX?
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Replying to @o_guest @kirstie_j and
The code in python and the report in latex. The contributors are basically me (for some initial code/templates) and the student
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Replying to @DrVeronikaCH @o_guest and
This is for bsc/msc thesis projects
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Replying to @DrVeronikaCH @vcheplygina and
I would store these in two (at least) separate repos. Saving the many compiled PDFs on github will be a pain and they will wreak havoc on your repo's d/l speed and are technically not what git is for (no binary files ideally).
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Replying to @o_guest @kirstie_j and
I was planning to have only one pdf or add it to .gitignore. but I do use online latex editors myself so maybe that's what I should teach :)
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Up to you! I do keep my writing and my coding (even if for the same project) separate though. I even keep code for the same project separate from other code for the same project. Submodules on github are useful in the right context! 
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Replying to @o_guest @kirstie_j and
None of my stuff is really on Github yet but I'm finding that wanting to teach students how to do things properly is speeding up the transition
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