Thank you for taking the time to contribute to this project. 🎉
This project is being developed privately currently with an intention to open information upon approval from all OLS governance members, inviting contributions from anyone interested who would like to get involved.
You can suggest topics to include in this repository, report mistakes/bugs, create Pull Requests to fix an error, offer resources or help develop or review the training materials.
We have a Code of Conduct that applies to all the activities related to this project.
In this repository, we use the All Contributors Bot that help us recognise all contributors, even when they don't directly contribute on the repository. You can find all emoji/Type keywords representing the types of contribution.
To add a contributor, comment on Issue or Pull Request (where the contributor is involved) using this message for @all-contributors:
@all-contributors please add @<username> for <keyword in the Type column>
Look through our currently open issues to troubleshoot an issue or participate in an ongoing discussion by commenting. You can also share this repository with someone who might be interested to get involved.
You can read our README file to find details and the next milestones in the project. You can also read different issues in this repository and comment where you would like to be involved.
Please share feedback on the contents proposed for setting up an online collaborative repository for data science and research. You are encouraged to review the material as we collaboratively develop them and get involved where you can. Please open a GitHub issue to suggest a new topic, contribute code, or let us know about errors/bugs.
- For open tasks in this repository, please see the Issues section.
- Raise mistakes, errors or missing information on this repository by opening a Pull Request
- Read details on how to open a Pull Request
- Submit trivial fixes (for example, a typo, a broken link or an obvious error)
- Start work on a contribution that is already listed as an issue or something you’ve already discussed
- A Pull Request doesn’t have to represent finished work. It’s usually better to open a Pull Request early on, so others can watch or give feedback on your progress. Just mark it as a “WIP” (Work in Progress) in the subject line. You can always add more commits later.
For any organisation related queries or concerns, you can directly reach out to Malvika Sharan by emailing [email protected].
This work is licensed under the MIT license (code) and Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (for documentation). You are free to share and adapt the material for any purpose, even commercially, as long as you provide attribution (give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made) in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use, and with no additional restrictions.