From d75612d9431c330481a16d61d43aaefea733eb8f Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Cam Caswell Date: Sun, 24 Apr 2022 15:15:59 -0400 Subject: Make it more clear what forking is --- pydis_site/apps/content/resources/guides/pydis-guides/contributing.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'pydis_site') diff --git a/pydis_site/apps/content/resources/guides/pydis-guides/contributing.md b/pydis_site/apps/content/resources/guides/pydis-guides/contributing.md index db466029..bed2ffa1 100644 --- a/pydis_site/apps/content/resources/guides/pydis-guides/contributing.md +++ b/pydis_site/apps/content/resources/guides/pydis-guides/contributing.md @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ If you are here looking for the answer to a specific question, check out the sub {: .notification } ### 1. Fork and clone the repo -GitHub is a website based on Git that stores project files in the cloud. We use GitHub as a central place for sending changes, reviewing others' changes, and communicating with each other. You'll need to fork the repository to create a copy under your own GitHub account. You'll make your changes to this copy, which can then later be merged into the Python Discord repository. +GitHub is a website based on Git that stores project files in the cloud. We use GitHub as a central place for sending changes, reviewing others' changes, and communicating with each other. You'll need to create a copy under your own GitHub account, a.k.a. "fork" it. You'll make your changes to this copy, which can then later be merged into the Python Discord repository. Check out our [**guide on forking a GitHub repo**](./forking-repository/). -- cgit v1.2.3