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Welcome to the practical course "Create your own Local Codespace" 🤖

In this course, you will learn how to create a local development environment using Docker, allowing you to work efficiently and reproducibly without relying on a cloud-based Codespace.

In this course, we answer the following questions:

  • How do I start LearnPack locally?
  • The Codespace is failing, what do I do?
  • I want to take the Prompt-Engineering-Course but Codespaces are disabled, can't I take the course?
  • Do you have poor internet and need to work?
  • Tired of saying "Well, it works on my PC"?

The Solution: Create a Local Virtual Container using Docker

Este contenido ha sido merged

Prerequisites

Make sure you have installed and opened:

Dev Containers Extension

  • Docker Desktop

    You may need to register to use Docker. Remember to have Docker Desktop open.

Steps to Set Up the Local Development Environment

1. Clone the Course Repository Locally

In the Terminal, run:

git clone repository-url

Replace repository-url with the actual URL of the course repository.

2. Open the Development Container in VSCode

  • In VSCode, click on the >< icon in the bottom left corner.

Dev Containers Icon

  • Select Reopen in Container.

Reopen in Container

3. Wait for the Container to Configure

Things will happen in the Terminal, Don't-Panic!

The first time it takes quite a while, approximately 10 minutes.

4. Start the Container in Docker

Start the new container that will appear in Docker Desktop.

5. LearnPack Starts Automatically

LearnPack will start automatically.

We have the option to launch it in the browser.

Additional Resources

What is Docker and why is it necessary?

Docker is a platform that allows you to create, deploy, and run applications in containers. Containers enable developers to package an application with all its dependencies and configurations, ensuring it runs consistently in any environment. For this course, Docker allows us to create an isolated and reproducible development environment.


This tutorial was developed by the student CoolPenwin

Would you like to add anything else or modify any part of these instructions?