this post was submitted on 23 Aug 2023
-1 points (33.3% liked)

Emacs

310 readers
1 users here now

A community for the timeless and infinitely powerful editor. Want to see what Emacs is capable of?!

Get Emacs

Rules

  1. Posts should be emacs related
  2. Be kind please
  3. Yes, we already know: Google results for "emacs" and "vi" link to each other. We good.

Emacs Resources

Emacs Tutorials

Useful Emacs configuration files and distributions

Quick pain-saver tip

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I mentioned in a previous post that one of the things that I'm doing to bootstrap the content on this community was to get submissions from reddit and place them here.

I couldn't resist and decided to play with Reddit's and Lemmy's API to see if I could automate some of this job (not on Elisp, I will shamefully admit) and after some time I got a Python script that I checks the date of the last submission and grabs the url of all new (non-self) submissions and posts them here.

I was wondering what the community thinks of the idea of me running this script every hour or so? This would basically mean that every post from reddit would be synchonized here.

There are some other things that I'd like to do as well:

  • avoid posting links from people who are already here (to let them make the Lemmy post themselves)
  • Lots of posts on /r/emacs are "self" posts from people describing or summarizing their project/blog posts, and with a link inside it. I'd like to add a (interactive) step to look at "self" submissions and see if there is a link that can be submitted.
  • While checking for "self" submissions, possibly send a DM to the poster inviting them to join this community

What do you think? Should I go forward with these ideas?

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] rglullis 1 points 1 year ago