From 1403edd9d26ec8d19fd49eb59d55f9abf3c62558 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Cody Hiar <thornycrackers@users.noreply.github.com>
Date: Mon, 14 Jan 2019 20:02:35 -0700
Subject: Update README.md

---
 README.md | 31 +++++++++++++++----------------
 1 file changed, 15 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-)

diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index 920060d..cb0cce6 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -16,19 +16,18 @@ project from this repo.
 $ cookiecutter https://github.com/thornycrackers/cookiecutter_docker.git
 ```
 
-After that if you have `docker` and `make` installed you can simply use the
-following Makefile commands to start running the project.
-
-```bash
-$ make build
-$ make up
-$ make enter
-$ make down
-$ make clean
-```
-
-- build: Build the docker container
-- up: Spin up the docker container
-- enter: Enter the running container
-- down: Spin down the container but down remove
-- clean: Remove a stopped container
+You will be asked for a project name as well a a docker user. The project name
+can be what ever you want and the docker user will be the prefix you use for 
+your images on dockerhub. E.g. My docker images are usually `thornycrackers/proj`
+so I would use `thornycrackers`. After that you will have a new project setup
+that includes a preset `docker-compose.yml` with a simple `Dockerfile` and a 
+`Makefile` that will automate controlling the container. The following commands
+work out of the box.
+
+`make build` - Build your `docker_user/proj_name` image
+`make up` - Spin up your container and forwards port 8000 by default and mounts local file
+`make enter` - Open a bash terminal in the container
+`make down` - Stop the container
+`make clean` - Remove the stopped container
+
+[1]: https://github.com/audreyr/cookiecutter
-- 
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