findcommonground.uk/README.md

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## Contributing
Pull Requests from our design, development and operations teams of [Haufe.Group](http://www.haufe-lexware.com) and its subsidiaries are greatly appreciated. If you've never contributed to an open source project before we are more than happy to walk you through how to create a pull request.
The short version of it is to simply clone this repo into (a) a repo of your own account under (b) the name `[your_account_name].github.io`. Upon your first commit the blog should be published at `http://[your_account_name].github.io`. In this way you can add your changes and test them live. When you are finished create a pull request with your changes and submit it against our blog repo.
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Support for Categories and Tags were inspired by [this blog entry](http://www.minddust.com/post/tags-and-categories-on-github-pages/). A list of the defined categories and tags can be found at `_data/categories.yml` and `_data\tags.yml` respectively. If you want to add new categories or tags, you need to add them to the corresponding `.yml` file and add the matching template into the `meta/category` or `meta/tag` directories. Please do not go overboard with adding new categories and tags but try to stay within the ones we have. On the other hand - if you feel strongly about adding one, feel free to submit a pull request.
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Author support was inspired by [this blog entry](https://blog.sorryapp.com/blogging-with-jekyll/2014/02/06/adding-authors-to-your-jekyll-site.html). In order to add information on a new author, edit the `_data/authors.yml` file, then use the new key as `author` link in the posts. If an author cannot be found in `authors.yml`, the content of the `author` tag will be used verbose. In that case, no links to any social media (Twitter, Github and LinkedIn are currently supported) will be included.
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If you want to find out more about using `github-pages` for blogging or want to improve our blog the following links might be good starting points
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* [Jekyll documentation, i.e. how to include images](http://jekyllrb.com/docs/posts/)
* [Github pages powered by Jekyll](https://github.com/jekyll/jekyll/wiki/sites)
* Liquid Documentation [here](https://docs.shopify.com/themes/liquid-documentation/basics) and [here](https://github.com/Shopify/liquid/wiki/Liquid-for-Designers)
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Please note to set the proxy if you are working from within the Haufe Intranet
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set HTTP_PROXY=http://10.12.1.236:8083/
set HTTPS_PROXY=http://10.12.1.236:8083/
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If you find bugs or issues you can [open an issue](https://github.com/Haufe-Lexware/Haufe-Lexware.github.io/issues/new) describing the problem that you're looking to resolve and we'll go from there.
### Setting up jekyll on Mac OS X
If you happen to have Mac OS X device, it is a lot simpler to test your additions using the `jekyll` command line directly; you don't have to set up github pages, and you can still verify everything is fine.
To install `jekyll`, issue the following command in Terminal (I here assume you have the Mac OS X developer command line tools installed, which include ruby/gem):
```
$ sudo gem install jekyll
```
That will take a while. After that, `cd` into your `Haufe-Lexware.github.io` git clone (on your own fork obviously) and issue a
```
$ jekyll build
```
This will throw a couple of errors due to missing gems; install them one after the other in the order they occur:
```
$ sudo gem install jekyll-paginate
$ ...
```
Eventually (and hopefully) your `jekyll build` will succeed. After the build has succeeded, you can do a `jekyll serve`, and after that, you can browse the site locally on [`http://127.0.0.1:4000`](http://127.0.0.1:4000).
**Note**: The `https_proxy` setting is also needed on Mac OS X if you're inside the Haufe intranet:
```
$ export http_proxy=http://10.12.1.236:8083
$ export https_proxy=https://10.12.1.236:8083
```
### Setting up jekyll on Windows
The short version of this is: It's complicated, and not actually advisable.
The most promising path to doing this is most probably to set up a Linux VM and do it from there; that involves setting up ruby correctly, which may also be challenging, but it's still a lot simpler (and more supported) than directly on Windows.
But you can try this:
### Setting up jekyll using docker
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**Note**: This will work both on Windows and Mac OS X, in case you do not want to "pollute" your local machine with ruby packages.
If you have a working `docker` setup on your machine, you can use the prepackaged docker image by the jekyll team to try out the blog generation using that image.
Pull the `jekyll/jekyll:pages` image to get something which behaves almost exactly (or really close to) the github pages generation engine:
```sh
$ docker pull jekyll/jekyll:pages
```
Inside the docker Quickstart terminal, `cd` into your `Haufe-Lexware.github.io` fork containing your changes, and then issue the following command:
```sh
$ docker run --rm --label=jekyll --volume=$(pwd):/srv/jekyll \
-it -p $(docker-machine ip `docker-machine active`):4000:4000 \
jekyll/jekyll:pages
```
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If everything works out, the jekyll server will serve the blog preview on `http://<ip of your docker machine>:4000`. More information on running jekyll inside docker can be found here: [github.com/jekyll/docker](https://github.com/jekyll/docker).