Our aim is to give tools for women to understand technology. The Rails Girls events do this by providing a great first experience on building the Internet.
Rails Girls was founded at the end of 2010 in Helsinki. Originally intended as a one-time event, we never thought to see so many local chapters from all around the world! This guide will help you get started.
You can use our materials and instructions to roll out your own workshop in your city, workplace or kitchen! Read more about Rails Girls at https://railsgirls.com
View the guides at https://guides.railsgirls.com or clone this repo and install & run jekyll
$ cd railsgirls.github.io
$ bundle install
The guides use the pygments library to do syntax highlighting. If you don't have it installed you won't be able to see the highlight sections like the following:
{% highlight %}
{% endhighlight %}
If you aren't editing the code blocks, you can safely ignore this. If you want pygments, you can follow the install instructions in the "Pygments" section.
$ bundle exec jekyll server --watch
Wrap keyboard shortcuts with kbd HTML tag.
To make posts consistent in style use Ctrl+C
over CTRL-c
/ctrl+c
To shut down the server you can hit <kbd>Ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>C</kbd>
You might find some useful hints in this jekyll issue if it's not working as expected: Issue 503
To contribute a guide, view the instructions at https://guides.railsgirls.com/contributing
For updates and more follow @railsgirls
Official website and blog for Rails Girls movement can be found at https://railsgirls.com
Global mailing list for Rails Girls events at https://groups.google.com/group/rails-girls-team
- Karri Saarinen / @karrisaarinen / github
- Linda Liukas / @lindaliukas / github
- Vesa Vänskä / @vesan / github
- Terence Lee / @hone02 / github
..and all the other coaches and people making Rails Girls awesome. Please add yourself!