emeryberger / CSrankings

A web app for ranking computer science departments according to their research output in selective venues, and for finding active faculty across a wide range of areas.
http://csrankings.org
Other
2.73k stars 3.26k forks source link

Added Prof. Yefeng Zheng from Westlake University #7929

Closed yefeng-zheng closed 2 weeks ago

yefeng-zheng commented 2 weeks ago

Contributing to CSrankings

Thanks for contributing to CSrankings! Please read and indicate you agree with all these guidelines to getting your pull request accepted. Note that pull requests may take some time to get merged (please don't contact us for at least three months for updates, unless you are a sponsor - see below).

If you find CSrankings useful, please consider becoming a sponsor.

NOTE: IF YOU DO NOT FOLLOW THE STEPS BELOW, YOUR PULL REQUEST WILL BE SUMMARILY REJECTED. You must read and check all the boxes below by filling them in with an X or your PR will be rejected.

The Basics

Inclusion criteria

Updating an affiliation or home page

Adding one or more faculty members (including an entire department)

(Advanced) Quick contribution via a shallow clone

We recommend that you use the GitHub web user interface to make changes. However, it may be more convenient to clone the repository for larger-scale changes.

However, a full clone of the CSrankings repository is almost 2GB. To contribute a change without creating a full local clone of the CSrankings repo, you can perform a shallow clone. To do so, follow these steps:

  1. Fork the CSrankings repo. If you have an existing fork, but it is not up to date with the main repository, this technique may not work. If necessary, delete and re-create your fork to get it up to date. (Do not delete your existing fork if it has unmerged changes you want to preserve!)

  2. Do a shallow clone of your fork: git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/yourusername/CSrankings. This will only download the most recent commit, not the full git history.

  3. Make your changes on a branch, push them to your clone, and create a pull request on GitHub as usual.

If you want to make another contribution and some time has passed, perform these steps again, creating a fresh fork and shallow clone.