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Library Carpentry: litsearchr

This repository generates the corresponding lesson website from The Carpentries repertoire of lessons.

Library Carpentry

Library Carpentry is a software and data skills training programme for people working in library- and information-related roles. It builds on the work of Software Carpentry and Data Carpentry. Library Carpentry is an official Lesson Program of The Carpentries.

License

All Software, Data, and Library Carpentry instructional material is made available under the Creative Commons Attribution license. Licensed under CC-BY 4.0 2016–2020 by Library Carpentry.

It is distributed under a https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

Contributing

We welcome all contributions to improve the lesson! Maintainers will do their best to help you if you have any questions, concerns, or experience any difficulties along the way.

We'd like to ask you to familiarize yourself with our Contribution Guide and have a look at the more detailed guidelines on proper formatting, ways to render the lesson locally, and even how to write new episodes.

Please see the current list of [issues][FIXME] for ideas for contributing to this repository. For making your contribution, we use the GitHub flow, which is nicely explained in the chapter Contributing to a Project in Pro Git by Scott Chacon. Look for the tag good_first_issue. This indicates that the maintainers will welcome a pull request fixing this issue.

Maintainer(s)

Current maintainers of this lesson are

Authors

A list of contributors to the lesson can be found in AUTHORS

We would like to acknowledge and thank Clarke Lakovakis for allowing us to use his Introduction to R guide while developing this course.

The guide accompanied the first day of instruction for his course at the 2019 FORCE11 Scholarly Communications Institute: “AM4 - Working with Scholarly Literature in R: Pulling, Wrangling, Cleaning, and Analyzing Structured Bibliographic Metadata.” It covers the essentials of what R is. The full guide can be found here: https://ciakovx.github.io/IntroductionToR.html

It is distributed under a https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

Citation

To cite this lesson, please consult with CITATION