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CodeFor.de

These are the source files for the Code for Germany Website.
This readme will guide you to use them and collaborate with us on its contents.

Setting up a development sandbox

First clone this git repository by invoking the following in a desired folder on your shell interpreter (console, terminal, command line, REPL), presuming you know how to get there:

$ git clone https://github.com/okfde/codefor.de.git

You can also append another foldername of your desire to the command.
Then change into the folder, i.e.:

$ cd codefor.de

Meeting Jekyll + Ruby

Now it is about time to install the required gems.
There are several ways to accomplish this.

Ruby

First of all you need an up-to-date version of the Ruby Programming Language Interpreter. This can either be installed through your favourite distributions package manager, or ...

RVM

You can use RVM to sandbox the Gems needed for this project in a Gemset. To do so you will need to install RVM first. When you successfully installed RVM make sure you also installed the Ruby version defined for this project in .ruby-version.

To initialize the Gemset environment leave the project folder once and then return back to it:

$ cd ..
$ cd codefor.de

Finally, after pulling the latest commits from the remote repository run the bundle command to ensure you have the latest Gems installed into you Gemset.

rbenv

Preferably you will want to do pretty much the same, but with rbenv.

Jekyll

Setting up a local gemset

System-wide installation with Bundler

You can use Bundler to install the required gems system-wide:

$ bundle install
System-wide installation without Bundler

Simply install the github-pages gem:

$ gem install github-pages

All required dependencies will be installed automatically. You will need root permissions to do that in most cases.

Local installation with Bundler

If you don't want to install all the gems system-wide you can install them just for the project:

$ bundle install --path vendor/bundle

On OS X you have to configure the following options to build nokogiri before running bundle install:

$ bundle config --local build.nokogiri --with-xml2-include=/usr/include/libxml2 --with-xml2-lib=/usr/lib --with-xslt-dir=/usr

After that you can just run bundle install every time you want to reinstall or update the installation because Bundler will remember the options you configured.

Build and serve the site

Now build the site and serve it:

$ jekyll serve -w

If you did the installation with Bundler you have to use this command instead:

$ bundle exec jekyll serve -w

Task Automation and Deployment

To get a fully working website running, especially if you added new Twitter handles somewhere, you have to perform some further tasks.

Download avatars

There's a Python script to cache all GitHub avatars into the repository.

Virtual Environments

optional

Similiar to rbenv or nvm, you can create safe installations of Python by using Virtual Environments. Or even an Virtual Environment Wrapper, but the first option will be enough for now.

$ virtualenv .pyenv
$ source .pyenv/bin/activate

Requirements

Install the following:

$ pip install pyyaml requests

Run the task

And then just execute:

$ python download_avatars.py

note Don't forget to deactivate the virtual environment afterwards, if appropriate.

Don't forget to commit the downloaded images.

Node?

Why did we mention NVM up there?

So we're already depending this project on Ruby and Python, why not adding another layer of complexity? Like Node.js, the JavaScript interpreter for servers.

There are two basic options, which you can discover, if you feel adventurous:

  • Find and use gulp and a corresponding jekyll plugin to automate the avatar scraping upon site regeneration.
  • Feel free to fiddle around with bower to manage the static assetts and dependencies.

Some words about Projects

Text on project teasers is cut off after \n\n. Alternatively, include a dedicated excerpt: "<TEXT>" in the frontmatter to override.
Images are crop-centered. You can fine tune their appearance by providing a specific crop image through imgname-teaser: "<[RELATIVE] PATH TO IMAGE>" in the same frontmatter.

note Please use mobile friendly filesizes for images.


Get Involved!

Consider our Contribution Guidelines.

Who we are

Code for Germany.

Where you can reach us

Legit, on the website who's source you are looking at, http://codefor.de and Twitter.

Legal

Licensed 2014

About

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  • HTML 76.7%
  • CSS 11.7%
  • JavaScript 9.5%
  • Ruby 1.2%
  • Python 0.9%