Book Image

Moodle 3.x Developer's Guide

By : Ian Wild, Jaswant Tak
Book Image

Moodle 3.x Developer's Guide

By: Ian Wild, Jaswant Tak

Overview of this book

The new and revamped Moodle is the top choice for developers to create cutting edge e-learning apps that cater to different user’s segments and are visually appealing as well. This book explains how the Moodle 3.x platform provides a framework that allows developers to create a customized e-learning solution. It begins with an exploration of the different types of plugin.. We then continue with an investigation of creating new courses. You will create a custom plugin that pulls in resources from a third-party repository. Then you’ll learn how users can be assigned to courses and granted the necessary permissions. Furthermore, you will develop a custom user home. At the end of the book, we’ll discuss the Web Services API to fully automate Moodle 3.x in real time.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Dedication
Preface
6
Managing Users - Letting in the Crowds

Source control with GitHub


In this section, you learn how to manage source code--specifically using GitHub and Git Bash. This appendix is intended purely as an overview to using GitHub and Git Bash. For more details, refer to GitHub Fundamentals [Video], also from Packt Publishing (https://www.packtpub.com/application-development/github-fundamentals-video).

Version control is vital to any project, and this applies to any collection of information and not just computer source code. For example, certainly for our resilience project, the second page of each written document has a version history:

Each change in the document is commented on--together with who changed the document. It's the same with the code for our plugins, except the tool we use to manage the version control is the online tool, GitHub at https://github.com/. GitHub is more than a version control system--among other tools, GitHub also provides an issue/bug tracker and a project Wiki. As an example, let's take a look at the Moodle...