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Objective - To fork a project, add, commit, and push a single change upstream.
Objective - To familiarize with basic git commands
Part 1 - Forking the Project
To fork the project, click the Fork button located at the top right of the project.
Part 2 - Navigating to forked Repository
Navigate to your github profile to find the newly forked repository .
Copy the URL of the project to the clipboard.
Part 3 - Cloning forked repository
Clone the repository from your account into the ~/dev directory.
if you do not have a ~/dev directory, make one by executing the following command:
navigate to the ~/dev directory by executing the following command:
clone the project by executing the following command:
git clone https://github.com/MyUserName/my-first-fork.git
Part 4 - Opening cloned project
from a text editor (i.e. - Visual Studio Code), select:
File > Add Folder to WorkSpace
from the text editor, in the dev directory, locate the newly cloned project
expand the project from the project explorer
modify the my-details.txt file to include your full name, college-classification, major, and minor
Part 5 - Pushing new changes to repository
from a terminal navigate to the root directory of the cloned project.
from the root directory of the project, execute the following commands:
add all changes
commit changes to be pushed
git commit -m 'I have added my name to the text file!'
push changes to your repository
git push -u origin master
Part 6 - Submitting assignment
from the browser, navigate to the forked project from your github account.
click the Pull Requests tab.
select New Pull Request
Part 7 - Ensuring project has been submitted
Upon submission, your name, and a link to your project should be made available by clicking here
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