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Ayu Adiati
Ayu Adiati

Posted on • Edited on • Originally published at adiati.com

Contributing To An Open Source by A First-Timer (Part 1)

Hello Fellow Codenewbies πŸ‘‹

If you are self-taught, maybe you have a similar experience as mine.
As a self-taught, I only use "git" to push my own project to my own repository.

Also, other than the default (main) branch, I never create any other branch to work with.
I always create solo projects. And my naive thought says, 'I don't see the need of creating another branch because I will push my changes directly to my main branch'.

There Would Be A First Time For Everything

I have never thought of taking part in Hacktoberfest or contributing to any open-source out there simply because the idea of doing one is too overwhelming. I don't see many beginner-friendly repos to contribute to.

But this year - thanks to my beautiful community Virtual Coffee - I got the experience contributing to its open-source.
(πŸ“’ Special thanks to Dan Ott for the clear written instructions and Mike Rogers for helping me out executing one when I was shaking!)

From Forking Until Committing

  • Fork a repo
    Open the repo we want to contribute to on GitHub and click the fork button on the top right.

  • Clone the repo

    • Click the green "Code" button and copy the HTTPS URL.
    • In the terminal, navigate to the location where we want to store the repo.

        cd new-project-storage
      
    • Now it's time to use this command to clone the repo and paste the copied HTTPS URL as repo-url.

        git clone <repo-url>
      
  • Create a new feature branch

This branch would be our working branch, where we will commit our changes and the branch that we push later on to the upstream repo.

git branch <branch-name>
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This is to ensure that we are in the branch where we will make changes before working on it, so we don't accidentally push our changes to the main branch.

  git checkout <branch-name>
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πŸ“ Additional Note

There is a shortcut to create a branch and navigate it automatically to the new branch:

  git checkout -b <branch-name>
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After we finish working on our changes, let's add them to the staging area.

git add .
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Then commit the changes.

git commit -m "The message of our changes"
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β˜•β˜•β˜•

We're done with all the steps from forking the repo until committing our changes.

Now let's take a coffee break before we create the Pull Request, which I will continue in the next post.

⚠ Reminder

Don't push our changes before reading the next post!


Thank you for reading!
Last but not least, you can find me on Twitter. Let's connect! 😊

Top comments (6)

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alina_kostenko profile image
Alina

Great break down @adiatiayu

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adiatiayu profile image
Ayu Adiati

Thanks for reading!

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zippytyro profile image
Shashwat Verma

Pretty awesome! I also started with the open-source via Hacktoberfest, it was a great experience.

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adiatiayu profile image
Ayu Adiati

That's great! πŸ˜ƒ
I really wish I could contribute more to open-source.
But so far, I don't know how I can find beginner-friendly open-source πŸ˜…

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zippytyro profile image
Shashwat Verma

Yup, feels great. You can find beginner-friendly reps on Good first issue.
Also, use Github advance search to find relevant repos. GFI (Good first issue) is meant for beginners only who want to contribute. Find here-goodfirstissue.dev/

There are also tags on issues opened on github, GFI and beginner-friendly etc.
Check them out.

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adiatiayu profile image
Ayu Adiati

Thanks! πŸ˜ƒ