Skip to main content

Client for communicating with SD Løn

Project description

Another SD Client

SD client library for communicating with SD Løn

Getting started

To make it easy for you to get started with GitLab, here's a list of recommended next steps.

Already a pro? Just edit this README.md and make it your own. Want to make it easy? Use the template at the bottom!

Add your files

cd existing_repo
git remote add origin https://git.magenta.dk/rammearkitektur/another-sd-client.git
git branch -M master
git push -uf origin master

Integrate with your tools

Collaborate with your team

Test and Deploy

Use the built-in continuous integration in GitLab.


Editing this README

When you're ready to make this README your own, just edit this file and use the handy template below (or feel free to structure it however you want - this is just a starting point!). Thank you to makeareadme.com for this template.

Suggestions for a good README

Every project is different, so consider which of these sections apply to yours. The sections used in the template are suggestions for most open source projects. Also keep in mind that while a README can be too long and detailed, too long is better than too short. If you think your README is too long, consider utilizing another form of documentation rather than cutting out information.

Name

Choose a self-explaining name for your project.

Description

Let people know what your project can do specifically. Provide context and add a link to any reference visitors might be unfamiliar with. A list of Features or a Background subsection can also be added here. If there are alternatives to your project, this is a good place to list differentiating factors.

Badges

On some READMEs, you may see small images that convey metadata, such as whether or not all the tests are passing for the project. You can use Shields to add some to your README. Many services also have instructions for adding a badge.

Visuals

Depending on what you are making, it can be a good idea to include screenshots or even a video (you'll frequently see GIFs rather than actual videos). Tools like ttygif can help, but check out Asciinema for a more sophisticated method.

Installation

Within a particular ecosystem, there may be a common way of installing things, such as using Yarn, NuGet, or Homebrew. However, consider the possibility that whoever is reading your README is a novice and would like more guidance. Listing specific steps helps remove ambiguity and gets people to using your project as quickly as possible. If it only runs in a specific context like a particular programming language version or operating system or has dependencies that have to be installed manually, also add a Requirements subsection.

Usage

Use examples liberally, and show the expected output if you can. It's helpful to have inline the smallest example of usage that you can demonstrate, while providing links to more sophisticated examples if they are too long to reasonably include in the README.

Support

Tell people where they can go to for help. It can be any combination of an issue tracker, a chat room, an email address, etc.

Roadmap

If you have ideas for releases in the future, it is a good idea to list them in the README.

Contributing

State if you are open to contributions and what your requirements are for accepting them.

For people who want to make changes to your project, it's helpful to have some documentation on how to get started. Perhaps there is a script that they should run or some environment variables that they need to set. Make these steps explicit. These instructions could also be useful to your future self.

You can also document commands to lint the code or run tests. These steps help to ensure high code quality and reduce the likelihood that the changes inadvertently break something. Having instructions for running tests is especially helpful if it requires external setup, such as starting a Selenium server for testing in a browser.

Authors and acknowledgment

Show your appreciation to those who have contributed to the project.

License

For open source projects, say how it is licensed.

Project status

If you have run out of energy or time for your project, put a note at the top of the README saying that development has slowed down or stopped completely. Someone may choose to fork your project or volunteer to step in as a maintainer or owner, allowing your project to keep going. You can also make an explicit request for maintainers.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

another_sd_client-1.11.0.tar.gz (10.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

another_sd_client-1.11.0-py3-none-any.whl (9.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file another_sd_client-1.11.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: another_sd_client-1.11.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 10.3 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.8.3 CPython/3.11.9 Linux/6.1.85+

File hashes

Hashes for another_sd_client-1.11.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5650d1c0b36cac97ed976a3d742db7b62a41d39fba95c73893c5c07d155219f1
MD5 a03e601477ca26031758790fa5f72715
BLAKE2b-256 3c8b93ad5b3bbc6e527d04909fa011e8b7f8dd90538ac6d30053392987c46cf6

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file another_sd_client-1.11.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for another_sd_client-1.11.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 e3b3eed8d161afde20142763643b9a133764a141d595d5e56ae27f2c5ffb6475
MD5 087733231b536a3a512f75aecc3d3502
BLAKE2b-256 6996d5ae9135c928e747dacc4cc0d24b6b26facacde227bb74f059b8531b9905

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page