Depends on what you wanna know! They're ranked as the best gecko for beginners, and really aren't too hard to take care of; I have three of these guys, all in separate tanks.
They need to have a basking spot, but more belly heat than overhead UVB, I have stick on heat mats on the bottom of my glass tanks, plugged into regulators that keep them around 84* temps, if they get too cold they will hide and refuse to eat, so I always make sure they have a warm spot to settle down in.
Humidity is usually around 40% in their tanks, that's the usual levels in my apartment, but it's been lower, higher, and it doesn't affect them either way. Though higher humidity will help when they shed, when they have trouble I usually put a glob of damp moss in their tanks to help them along, they also eat their shed skin, so there's not much clean-up involved.
Note* they LOVE their hides, all of mine poop off the side of their hides, and will sit on top of them to be out in the open sometimes. I keep theirs on the opposite side of the tank away from the heat mat so they can regulate and be comfortable. I also keep my tanks off of a flat counter so the mat can get air flow (picture attached is my set up for my gecko-tanks and my skink tank)
Depending on the tank, I wouldn't use sand like most out-of-the-box kits come with, unless you're gonna do calci-sand, because they can ingest this and get compounded, specially if they're younger, I've used the fake grass, and paper towels, they don't seem to be picky about one or the other, but the only downside of papertowels is if you let their food free-roam, most will usually hide under them.
Mine also personally don't really care for climbing vines/leaves, but they love to chill underneath them, I have mine placed over the part of the tank with the heat mat, and they'll nap there under the leaves.
Since mine are all female, I do have make-shift lay-boxes in their tanks, given there's enough room, one of mine doesn't care for it at all, but the other two will sleep, dig around, and chill out in their lay boxes constantly, they're filled with eco-earth. One of them has laid phantom eggs in them before, but I think it's more just a comfort thing for the other.
They should have a bowl of water constantly, and I feed mine usually every couple days. I personally leave a little bottlecap of calcium powder in each of their tanks, they don't eat it but occasionally will lick at it....They love meal worms, dubia, crickets- I use those as a staple, coated in calcium powder / multivitamin. But I've given them smaller super / wax / and butter-worms as treats, not too often though because they decide they wanna get picky sometimes and not eat... the rule of thumb, just like with Cham's is to not feed them anything bigger than their head, 'cause they could choke on it, regardless of what it is.
One major thing to note is that their tails are EVERYTHING; fat tails = happy (healthy) geckos, they store their nutrition in their tail, females tails will shrink when they lay eggs because their taking extra nutrition they need directly from their tails, and they use it for nutrition between feedings. You have to be kind of careful though because they can also drop their tails if they get too stressed or feel too threatened/scared.
On the other hand though, all of mine love being handled, I've been in the kitchen cooking with my giant (gecko picture 3) just chilling on my shoulder, the other ones are too wriggly when they're out of the tank, but they'll crawl around my arms and lap, curl up in my shirt, they have to get used to you, though, when my youngest was a baby, I'd pick her up and she'd scream, but now she loves being coddled around.
I'm sure there's different ways to do it, but, this is what's worked for me over the passed three years with mine.
I've babbled a crap load, but if there's anything you want to know / want an opinion on that I missed, let me know!!
<3