Computers II

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Worth your time.

Class GitHub organization.

Class syllabus (woefully incomplete).

Gradebook.

Current Projects

Previous Projects

Inkscape Intro

At the moment your GitHub account does not have a picture associated with it! If you look over to our GitHub organization (link at the top of this page), you'll see an .svg file that I built is set as our "organization" image. Here is the file:

BlueCirclePrintrBot.svg

If you'd like to download it to check out the layers in Inkscape, click the image, then right click one of the thumbnails below. Click "Save link as..." then choose the directory to download to. Open that folder, then double-click the file. Select the image, then press ctrl + g a few times to ungroup the layers. I built it the other evening by finding a picture of a PrintrBot Play, then dragging it into Inkscape and tracing. I made liberal use of the dropper tool.

Your assignment (due before Thanksgiving break) is to create a square image in Inkscape that represents you in some way. Don't be too precious about the assignment; you aren't getting a tattoo, so if you decide in a few weeks that you don't like it, you'll have the skills to change/update it.

Here are some ideas: Take and trace a picture of yourself; trace your hair/glasses; begin with your favorite animal and look to tutorials on how to create it; make a goat; make your initials, then stylize them; make a mountain; use the colors of your future college; discover Charley Harper, weep for joy, realize we have one of his books in the library, then trace his design.

By the end of the process you will upload the file to GitHub as your avatar.

I can't wait to see where you take this.

HarperOwls.svg

Building beautiful things in Inkscape:

Git Vocab

Some things to know about Git and GitHub:

  • Repository (or "repo") is a folder or directory containing all of the files within a project.
  • Commit is the action of adding a new file, or applying changes to the files, within a repo.
  • History shows the changes made to the repo by each commit. Note that you can go back to a previous version to undo your changes with this!
  • Commit hash is a unique identifier for each commit action. This allows you to share previous versions and control your changes.[1]

Some things to know about Git and GitHub:

  • Branch a version of your repository. You may have several branches in each project, edited by many people, or to keep track of attempted alterations to your main, Master, branch. Create a new branch at the commit action, or by selecting the branch in dropdown. (See a cool visualization of these changes by clicking the "Graphs" tab on your main page, then choosing "Network"!)
  • Merge combine the main files in the master branch with those in another branch. This allows you to choose whether or not to apply the changes suggested by others, or to apply the attempted alterations you made in a branch.[2]
  • Fork allows you to copy an entire repo, either your own or another's, into your account. This includes the history, as well.
  • Pull request is the action of asking the owner of a repo to "pull" your branch into the main repository on their account.[3]

References