A custom HTML element for displaying GitHub repositories.
<github-repo src="OWNER/REPO"></github-repo>
- Powered by the GitHub API.
- Works just like any other element. Use jQuery (or not) to change the
src
attribute and watch the content magically update! - Requires no authentication. Everything runs in the browser, so you don't have to write any server logic or manage access tokens!
- Uses local storage to cache API requests. This keeps everything fast and under GitHub's API rate limits.
- Only modern browsers are supported.
- Only works with public repositories.
- Requires javascript.
This package is available in two distributions. The bundled version includes Skate.js, while the stand-alone assumes you will include that yourself. Note you only need one of the version.
- Bundled (includes depencies) ~12kb
- Stand-alone (no dependencies bundled) ~4kb
To install the <github-repo>
element, include the script(s) on your page:
<!-- If you downloaded the bundled version, just include it -->
<script src="/path/to/github-element-bundled.js"></script>
<!-- OR -->
<!-- If you downloaded the stand-alone version, also include Skate.js -->
<script src="/path/to/skate.min.js"></script>
<script src="/path/to/github-element.js"></script>
You can require this package via bower, if that's your thing.
bower install github-repo-element
Similar to installing manually, either include the bundled or standalone version.
Once you have installed the <github-repo>
element, it works just like any other HTML elements on
your page. You can add them, manipulate them with jquery, or anything!
To set which repository the element looks at, just the src
attribute. Use the pattern of
OWNER/REPO
.
<github-repo src="stevenschobert/github-repo-element"></github-repo>
To style the <github-repo>
's contents, use the following CSS selectors.
/* Repository title */
github-repo .ghrepo-title {
}
/* Repository description */
github-repo .ghrepo-description {
}
/* Repository stars and forks */
github-repo .ghrepo-meta {
}
Please read over GitHub's awesome guide on contributing if you'd like to lend a hand!
- Tests
- More data from GitHub