Hi! Welcome to PlanetXamarin.com!
If you write about Xamarin, you belong here. You're welcome to add your blog and have it aggregated as part of our feed as long as the content you are sharing does not violate the community code of conduct.
- I have a valid blog & RSS URL, both using HTTPS with a valid certificate
- Host NO malicious or offensive content on the blog (including photos, swearing, etc.)
- Blog is active with at least 3 Xamarin related blog posts in the last 6 months
- If the blog has mixed content (Xamarin and Personal/Non-Xamarin blogs) a filter has been applied
- If you delete your blog you will come delete your blog from Planet Xamarin
- Your blog may be removed at any time if any of these are broken.
To add yourself as an author you can fork this project, add yourself to the authors folder as a class, implementing the IAmACommunityMember
interface. If you are doing this via the GitHub editor, don't forget to add the class to the .csproj.
The result should look something like this:
public class BruceWayne : IAmACommunityMember
{
public string FirstName => "Bruce";
public string LastName => "Wayne";
public string ShortBioOrTagLine => "potentially batman";
public string StateOrRegion => "Gotham";
public string EmailAddress => "[email protected]";
public string TwitterHandle => "planetxamarin";
public string GravatarHash => "42abc1337def";
public string GitHubHandle => "planetxamarin";
public GeoPosition Position => new GeoPosition(47.643417, -122.126083);
public Uri WebSite => new Uri("https://planetxamarin.com/");
public IEnumerable<Uri> FeedUris { get { yield return new Uri("https://planetxamarin.com/rss"); } }
public string FeedLanguageCode => "en";
}
A few things:
- Name the class after your first and lastname with PascalCase
- The
FirstName
andLastName
property should resemble that same name ShortBioOrTagLine
property can be whatever you like. If you can't think of anything choose: 'software engineer' or 'software engineer at Microsoft'. Please keep it short, like a 140 character tweet.StateOrRegion
will be your geographical location, i.e.: Holland, New York, etc.EmailAddress
,TwitterHandle
andGitHubHandle
should be pretty clear,TwitterHandle
without the leading @Position
is your latitude and longitude, this allows you to be placed on the map on the Authors page- The
Website
property can be your global website or whatever you want people to look at - With
FeedUris
you can supply one or more URIs which resemble your blogs. Your blogs should be provided in RSS (Atom) format and of course be about Xamarin. - And finally
FeedLanguageCode
specifies in what lanuage the majority of your content will be. This is used to be able to apply filters to the feed. This language code should be in ISO 639-1 format - If you do not want your e-mailaddress publicly available but you do want to show your Gravatar go to https://en.gravatar.com/site/check/ and get your hash! If you don't fill the hash, you will be viewed as a silhouette.
If you also do some blogging about other stuff, no worries! You're fine! Just have a look at the next section on how to filter out your Xamarin specific posts.
Per default PlanetXamarin implements a default filter looking for Xamarin in the title and categories (tags) you have on your blog posts. This behavior can be modified by implementing IFilterMyBlogPosts
, where you can implement your own filtering logic.
It could be that you want to disable all filtering because your blog is solely about Xamarin. Maybe, you run a Xamarin newsletter or podcast.
public class BruceWayne : IAmACommunityMember, IFilterMyBlogPosts
{
// ... Author properties from the above class, removed for brevity
public bool Filter(SyndicationItem item)
{
// Here you filter out the given item by the criteria you want, i.e.
// this filters out posts that do not have Xamarin in the title
return item.Title.Text.ToLowerInvariant().Contains("xamarin");
// This filters out only the posts that have the "xamarin" category
// Not all blog posts have categories, please guard against this
return item.Categories?.Any(c => c.Name.ToLowerInvariant().Equals("xamarin")) ?? false;
// Of course you can make the checks as complicated as you want and combine some stuff
return item.Title.Text.ToLowerInvariant().Contains("xamarin") && (item.Categories?.Any(c => c.Name.ToLowerInvariant().Equals("xamarin")) ?? false);
}
}
A big step for mankind! Last thing that remains is submit a Pull Request to us and whenever it gets merged: hooray! You're an author now!
Don't forget to incorporate the Featured on Planet Xamarin badge on your blog and link back to us!
Enjoy all of our great content!
Of course you are more than welcome to submit other features and bugfixes as well.
- Thanks to Readify for open sourcing their employee blog aggregation platform which we forked to create PlanetXamarin. Looking for your next challenge? Readify is hiring and offers relocation services for developers from abroad.
- Thanks to our awesome contributors and our community of authors who make this all possible.