This repo contains Areeta's portfolio and STEP projects. This work is based on the Google Software Product Sprint program.
This repo has three main directories:
- portfolio (a directory to host the main website for week 2's project)
- test (a directory to hold all test files)
- walkthroughs (a directory to hold week 1-5 instructions)
To get started:
- Login to Google Cloud Shell
- Clone this repo:
cd; git clone https://github.com/googleinterns/step.git
- Open the GitHub setup walkthrough:
teachme ~/step/walkthroughs/week-1-setup/github-setup-walkthrough.md
- If the tutorial panel does not open or display the walkthrough contents, try refreshing the page.
Then follow the on-screen instructions to set up your repo.
Google Cloud is a set of tools that lets you run code on the same computers that run Google. There are many ways to use Google Cloud: as a Java library, as a standalone tool, or as a service.
Cloud Shell is one way to interact with Google Cloud. Cloud Shell gives you a code editor that lets you edit files, and a command line window to run commands. You can think of Cloud Shell as a window into a computer running inside of Google Cloud. You're going to use Cloud Shell over the next few weeks to write, build, and run your code.
If you see Cloud Shell
in the upper-left corner and you're reading this text
in a panel on the right, then you're already using Cloud Shell!
Cloud Shell comes with a built-in code editor that allows you to browse file directories and view and edit files.
The editor displays the directory structure in its left-hand panel. You'll learn more about these files throughout STEP, but for now try clicking around to explore. Try opening the intro-walkthrough.md file to view the source for this walkthrough!
You'll be using the Cloud Shell editor quite a bit in the coming weeks, so take some time to familiarize yourself now. You can read more about Cloud Shell Editor here.
Cloud Shell also comes with a command line console that lets you run commands in Google Cloud.
You can type commands into the console to run programs, compile your code, and deploy to Google Cloud.
If you're new to the command line, that's okay! You'll learn about some other commands soon, and you can also Google "command line commands" for some other resources.