 Hello and welcome to the intro video to documentation. I'm Francesca Brunat and I am one of the team leads for documentation. This slide deck that you're going to see here, you can also find on Slack. So you can go to Slack to the Hackathon March 2023 documentation channel. And up here, you will find the progress slides. So what are we going to do in documentation? Ask the names as we're going to do all the documentation things that are NFCore. This can mean either for pipelines. This can be new pipelines, existing pipelines, improvements. But also for NFCore tools. And as a separate point, there are a lot of documentation things to be done in outreach. I personally will, for example, work on the bite-size talks, but there's also training videos, training documentation that can be improved, or translations into other languages. So this is all under the umbrella of documentation. As I said before, I am one of the team leads together with Marcel and Luisa. And if you have any questions, you first should go and ask in the Hackathon March 2023 documentation channel that I've just shown you. But otherwise, you can, of course, always come to one of the three team leads. Now, documentation is suggested for a lot of people to start if you have never been at a Hackathon. And for these people, often they don't know where to start. So we have given here some very nice links. So learning about GitHub, there is a tutorial. There's also a video about how to use the GitHub project board specifically for this Hackathon. You can find it in the link. If you don't know how Markdown works, you can find a link here. And also reviewing pull requests on GitHub, there is another tutorial. So good points here to start if you have not worked with GitHub, if you have not been at a Hackathon before. What tasks can we give to people? I separated out a bit into beginner and advanced. So if you're a beginner and you want to learn first how to use GitHub and stuff like that, then maybe you start with correcting typos and broken links, unclear language on our website. This will give you an introduction on reviews and pull requests and all these kind of things. Also, after that, you can try to install either tools or an individual pipeline. And it would be very nice to get some feedback and improvements on these things. And also, if you look at the project board, you will come across issues that are labeled first timer only. And you can look into those. To go to the project board, you can either use the link that I put in here, or you find it directly on GitHub. And it looks something like this at the moment. So there will be no status to do in progress and ready for review. So you just move on the cards. And it is important that if you choose to do a specific issue that you assign yourself here at the end of the sign-in, and that you move it to status in progress. And when you're done, to move it to done. You will see more about how to use the project board in the video for the project board. If you're a bit more advanced, you might want to work on your own pipeline and improve the documentation there. That's, of course, absolutely OK and very welcome. But we're also always very grateful if someone helps with documentation for tools. And of course, you should leave the first timer only tag to people that are first timers. Yeah, if you join our team, please add yourself to the team member slide, which is the next one here. And please also assign yourself to issues on the project board. There is a daily progress. So it would be very nice if you could post your progress on the next slide. This can be something very simple, like fixed typo, issue, and solved issue number. Or it could be a bit more explanatory as you wish. So this is the slide that I mentioned. So these slides are in Markdown. So you will probably come across it like this. And then you can add your own progress and your team number name here. So welcome to documentation and happy hacking.