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ACM REP 2023 Conference website

Repository structure

Most markdown for the content of the website is in /content. Each webpage has its own directory. Each of these directories contain a single index.md that determines whether the webpage's content is based on a single markdown file (the body of index.md) or is assembled from a series of "widgets" that are specified by seperate markdown files in the same directory. The order of widgets as they will appear on the rendered webpage is specified by weight: in the frontmatter of each of these files. Widgets can be hidden by setting active: false in its frontmatter.

Images and movies can be included using html within the body of each page or included by setting attributes specific to a particular widget. With some exceptions, images are stored in /assets/media. For instructions on how to reference media, see here.

The special meanings of main and gh-pages branches

Everything that is pushed or merged with the main branch will automatically trigger a workflow that will render the page using the gh-pages branch. The only purpose of gh-pages is for that workflow to function. If you are interested, the workflow is specified in .github/workflows/gh-pages.yml. Please do not push to either of these branches directly, and please do not issue a pull request to the gh-pages branch.

Editing the website

For small edits just edit the relevant markdown file directly on github. It is safer to create a pull request than to commit directly to main since a pull request will determine conflicts without interrupting other progress.

For larger edits there are two possibilities:

  1. Using a local git repository (recommended):

    • Clone the repository,
    • Perform edits -- I highly recommend using Visual Studio Code for editing and common git commands. It does a great job showing all files in the repository and their git status. Make sure to create a repository in a local directory that is not backed by Google Drive, iCloud, or any other file sharing service. Bad things tend to happen if you do, and
    • Install hugo (skip "Download a Template") and view your site locally using hugo server -D (it quickly rebuilds the local view whenever you save a change).
    • Create a pull request against the main branch of the origin acm-rep/2024 repository.
  2. Using the github website: fork the repository, perform the edits there and create a pull request against this repository. Unfortunately, I have not figured out how to get the web page render correctly in a forked repository.