Thursday Afternoons in June
1:00 - 4:00
Instructors: Tim Ribaric, Kaitlin Newson, Kyla Jemison
Helpers: John Fink
Library Carpentry is made by people working in library- and information-related roles to help you:
This rendition of the workshop will be presented online over 4 weeks. If you attend all four weeks you'll be given a certficate of completion. This is a rescheduling of the previously cancelled in person workshop that was originally set for end of April 2020. Registration is capped at 15 participants per week.
Library Carpentry introduces you to the fundamentals of computing and provides you with a platform for further self-directed learning. For more information on what we teach and why, please see our paper "Library Carpentry: software skills training for library professionals".
Who: The course is for people working in library- and information-related roles. You don't need to have any previous knowledge of the tools that will be presented at the workshop.
Requirements: Participants must have a laptop with a Mac, Linux, or Windows operating system (not a tablet, Chromebook, etc.) that they have administrative privileges on. They should have a few specific software packages installed (listed below).
Contact: Please email tribaric@brocku.ca for more information.
Everyone who participates in Carpentries activities is required to conform to the Code of Conduct.This document also outlines how to report an incident if needed.
We will use this collaborative document for chatting, taking notes, and sharing URLs and bits of code.
Please be sure to complete these surveys before and after the workshop.
Pre-workshop survey | |
Jargon Busting, A Computational Approach, Introduction to Working with Data (Regular Expressions) |
The Unix Shell |
Introduction to Git |
OpenRefine | |
Post-workshop survey |
add
, commit
, ...status
clone
, pull
, push
, ...To participate in a Library Carpentry workshop, you will need access to the software described below. In addition, you will need an up-to-date web browser.
We maintain a list of common issues that occur during installation as a reference for instructors that may be useful on the Configuration Problems and Solutions wiki page.
Bash is a commonly-used shell that gives you the power to do simple tasks more quickly. Please find setup instructions in the lesson.
OpenRefine is a tool to clean up and organize messy data. Please find instructions to install it and the data used in the lesson in the lesson.
Git is a version control system that lets you track who made changes to what when and has options for easily updating a shared or public version of your code on https://github.com.
Follow the instructions on the lesson to install Git on your system.
You will need an account at github.com for parts of the Git lesson. Basic GitHub accounts are free. We encourage you to create a GitHub account if you don't have one already. Please consider what personal information you'd like to reveal. For example, you may want to review these instructions for keeping your email address private provided at GitHub. You will need a supported web browser.