Hello, I'm Asthi Seta. Iโm 20 years old. Currently live in East Java, Indonesia,
I'm a Software Engineering student at Telkom University Surabaya formerly known as Institute Teknologi Telkom Surabaya (ITTS) while freelancing as a Mobile Engineer & App Developer in some local startup.
My main working fields are
While also learning
I also like to playing around with
as a hobby
Checkout my Latest Learning Repository ๐
My Remarkable Projects so far ๐งฐ
My Latest fully functional personal projects โ๏ธ
My latest project with my fellow friends ๐ง
My android learning repos ๐ฐ๏ธ
My android projects repos ๐ผ
My Visual Basics learning repo ๐ง
For you guys, my fellow SMK Telkom Malang friends, here are my UKL Tetralogy ๐๏ธ
If you're new to GitHub Pages, or you want to learn how to build and host a GitHub Pages site, you're in the right place. With GitHub Pages, you can host content like documentation, resumes, or any other static content that youโd like.
In this course, you'll create a blog hosted on GitHub Pages and learn how to:
For this course, you'll need to know how to create a branch on GitHub, commit changes using Git, and open a pull request on GitHub. If you need a refresher on the GitHub flow, check out the Introduction to GitHub course.
โจ๏ธ Activity: Generate a GitHub Pages site
The first step to publishing your blog to the web is to enable GitHub Pages on this repository ๐. When you enable GitHub Pages on a repository, GitHub takes the content that's on the main branch and publishes a website based on its contents.
In the "GitHub Pages" section, in the Source drop-down, select main branch.
After GitHub Pages is enabled and the site is started, we'll be ready to create some more content.
Turning on GitHub Pages creates a deployment of your repository. I may take up to a minute to respond as I await the deployment.
Return to this issue for my next comment.
Sometimes I respond too fast for the page to update! If you perform an expected action and don't see a response from me, wait a few seconds and refresh the page for your next steps.
Great work! You can see your published page here. If you don't see your changes right away, refresh the page.
Getting your page blog ready
Jekyll uses a file titled _config.yml to store settings for your site, your theme, and reusable content like your site title and GitHub handle.
You can check out the _config.yml file on the Code tab of your repository.
โจ๏ธ Activity: Modify the config file
Let's change the _config.yml so it's a perfect fit for your new blog. First, we need to use a blog-ready theme. For this activity, we will use a theme named minima.
Navigate to the Code tab of this repository, and browse to the _config.yml file, or click this link here.
In the upper right corner, click โ๏ธ to open the file editor.
Add a theme: set to minima so it shows in the _config.yml file as below:
theme: minima
Modify the other configuration variables such as title:, author:, and description: to customize your site.
Click Create a new branch for this commit and start a pull request.