git pull
- Make changes to
.md
files (see below) git status
to see what files you changedgit add XYZ.md
for every file you changed and you wish to commitgit push
- Go to the conference web page, make sure to reload the page.
The .md
files are Markdown files, here is a quick Markdown reference.
Page source files:
index.md
-- main conference pagesummer-school.md
-- summer school pagecall-for-papers.md
-- call for papersregistration.md
-- registration informationregistration.md
-- registration informationlocal.md
-- local information
These are the web pages for the HoTT 2019 conference. The website is at https://hott.github.io/HoTT-2019/.
The pages are written in the Markdown format and automatically translated to HTML by
GitHub. Simply edit the Markdown files and use Git to push the changes back to the server.
The website always shows the contents of the master
branch of the GitHub repository.
You need not generate the pages before you publish them, but it might be a good idea to do so and verify that the pages are OK, especially if you make significant changes.
To generate web pages locally for preview, you need Jekyll, which needs a million subsidiary Ruby packages. Rather than trying to install them with your bare hands, you should just try
bundle install
With a bit of luck you've got Ruby installed so this command will do the right thing. The
bundle
command is part of the Ruby Bundler package manager. On a
Mac it is available through Homebrew. On Linux it is available through
your package manager, e.g. on Debian/Ubuntu `sudo apt install ruby-bundler ruby-dev'.
Then to generate and serve the pages locally, run
bundle exec jekyll serve
The pages will appear at http://127.0.0.1:4000/.
On MacOS one of the libraries is causing problems. If bundle install
fails and complains that it cannot install nokogiri
, run these:
sudo gem install pkg-config
sudo gem install nokogiri -v '1.8.5' --source 'https://rubygems.org/' -- --use-system-libraries
Then run bundle install
again.