Xiaolong Li / 李小龙
I am Xiaolong Li, a third year undergraduate student in the Jing’s Lab, Department of Automation, Chongqing University, under the supervision of Prof.Gangshan Jing.
My research focuses on dexterous manipulation and tactile sensor.
Email:[20222032@stu.cau.edu.cn]
Education
Department of Automation, Chongqing University (Chongqing, China) 09/2022- present Undergraduate Student in Automation
Getting started
- Register a GitHub account if you don’t have one and confirm your e-mail (required!)
- Fork this template by clicking the “Use this template” button in the top right.
- Go to the repository’s settings (rightmost item in the tabs that start with “Code”, should be below “Unwatch”). Rename the repository “[your GitHub username].github.io”, which will also be your website’s URL.
- Set site-wide configuration and create content & metadata (see below – also see this set of diffs showing what files were changed to set up an example site for a user with the username “getorg-testacct”)
- Upload any files (like PDFs, .zip files, etc.) to the files/ directory. They will appear at https://[your GitHub username].github.io/files/example.pdf.
- Check status by going to the repository settings, in the “GitHub pages” section
Site-wide configuration
The main configuration file for the site is in the base directory in _config.yml, which defines the content in the sidebars and other site-wide features. You will need to replace the default variables with ones about yourself and your site’s github repository. The configuration file for the top menu is in _data/navigation.yml. For example, if you don’t have a portfolio or blog posts, you can remove those items from that navigation.yml file to remove them from the header.
Create content & metadata
For site content, there is one markdown file for each type of content, which are stored in directories like _publications, _talks, _posts, _teaching, or _pages. For example, each talk is a markdown file in the _talks directory. At the top of each markdown file is structured data in YAML about the talk, which the theme will parse to do lots of cool stuff. The same structured data about a talk is used to generate the list of talks on the Talks page, each individual page for specific talks, the talks section for the CV page, and the map of places you’ve given a talk (if you run this python file or Jupyter notebook, which creates the HTML for the map based on the contents of the _talks directory).
Markdown generator
The repository includes a set of Jupyter notebooks that converts a CSV containing structured data about talks or presentations into individual markdown files that will be properly formatted for the Academic Pages template. The sample CSVs in that directory are the ones I used to create my own personal website at stuartgeiger.com. My usual workflow is that I keep a spreadsheet of my publications and talks, then run the code in these notebooks to generate the markdown files, then commit and push them to the GitHub repository.
For more info
More info about configuring Academic Pages can be found in the guide, the growing wiki, and you can always ask a question on GitHub. The guides for the Minimal Mistakes theme (which this theme was forked from) might also be helpful.