Please note that that maximum number of participants in this workshop is 40
Please note that that maximum number of participants in this workshop is 20
Do you sometimes struggle with reproducing someone else’s code or understanding the code you wrote yourself a few months ago? You are not alone.
Modern-day scientists increasingly rely on code to wrangle, visualise, and analyse data, but these codes are often not free of hurdles and not readily applicable to your own data.
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In our new project, [CoreBirds](hhttps://www.researchequals.com/modules/m95v-7drc), we will create a library of documented and peer-reviewed codes. This library builds upon [SPI-Birds](https://spibirds.org/en), a grassroots initiative connecting those working on populations of individually-marked breeding birds, in which we build standardisation workflows to make data collected from these bird populations FAIR.
Interested in learning more about code standardisation and code peer review? Join our interactive OSC-W lunch seminar
Bring your lunch, laptop, and a script you’re currently working on (ideally in R)!