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GitHub Action

Twitter, together!

v1.1.1

Twitter, together!

cast

Twitter, together!

Collaborate on tweets just like you collaborate on code, using pull requests

Installation

Copy and paste the following snippet into your .yml file.

              

- name: Twitter, together!

uses: twitter-together/[email protected]

Learn more about this action in twitter-together/action

Choose a version

twitter together logo

Twitter, together!

Build Status Coverage

For Open Source or event maintainers that share a project twitter account, twitter-together is a GitHub Action that utilizes text files to publish tweets from a GitHub repository. Rather than tweeting directly, GitHub’s pull request review process encourages more collaboration, Twitter activity and editorial contributions by enabling everyone to submit tweet drafts to a project.

Screencast demonstrating twitter-together

Try it

You can submit a tweet to this repository to see the magic happen. Please follow the instructions at tweets/README.md and mention your own twitter username to the tweet. This repository is setup to tweet from https://twitter.com/commit2tweet.

Setup

  1. Create a twitter app with your shared twitter account and store the credentials as TWITTER_API_KEY, TWITTER_API_SECRET_KEY, TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN and TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET in your repository’s secrets settings.

  2. Create a .github/workflows/twitter-together.yml file with the content below. Make sure to replace 'master' if you changed your repository's default branch.

    on: [push, pull_request]
    name: Twitter, together!
    jobs:
      preview:
        name: Preview
        if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
        steps:
          - uses: gr2m/[email protected]
            env:
              GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
      tweet:
        name: Tweet
        if: github.event_name == 'push' && github.ref == 'refs/heads/master'
        steps:
          - uses: gr2m/[email protected]
            env:
              GITHUB_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
              TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN }}
              TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET: ${{ secrets.TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET }}
              TWITTER_API_KEY: ${{ secrets.TWITTER_API_KEY }}
              TWITTER_API_SECRET_KEY: ${{ secrets.TWITTER_API_SECRET_KEY }}
  3. After creating or updating .github/workflows/twitter-together.yml in your repository’s default branch, a pull request will be created with further instructions.

Happy collaborative tweeting!

Contribute

All contributions welcome!

Especially if you try twitter-together for the first time, I’d love to hear if you ran into any trouble. I greatly appreciate any documentation improvements to make things more clear, I am not a native English speaker myself.

See CONTRIBUTING.md for more information on how to contribute. You can also just say thanks 😊

Thanks to all contributors 💐

Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):

Jason Etcovitch
Jason Etcovitch

🎨 📖 💻
Erons
Erons

📖

This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!

How it works

twitter-together is using two workflows

  1. push event to publish new tweets
  2. pull_request event to validate and preview new tweets

The push event

When triggered by the push event, the script looks for added *.tweet files in the tweets/ folder or subfolders. If there are any, a tweet for each added tweet file is published.

If there is no tweets/ subfolder, the script opens a pull request creating the folder with further instructions.

The pull_request event

For the pull_request event, the script handles only opened and synchronize actions. It looks for new *.tweet files in the tweets/ folder or subfolders. If there are any, the length of each tweet is validated. If one is too long, a failed check run with an explanation is created. If all tweets are valid, a check run with a preview of all tweets is created.

Motivation

I think we can make Open Source more inclusive to people with more diverse interests by making it easier to contribute other things than code and documentation. I see a particularly big opportunity to be more welcoming towards editorial contributions by creating tools using GitHub’s Actions, Apps and custom user interfaces backed by GitHub’s REST & GraphQL APIs.

I’ve plenty more ideas that I’d like to build out. Please ping me on twitter if you’d like to chat: @gr2m.

License

MIT