Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
71 lines (50 loc) · 3.5 KB

Readme.md

File metadata and controls

71 lines (50 loc) · 3.5 KB

LinkDotNet.Blog

.NET CodeQL

This is a blog software completely written in C# / Blazor. The aim is to have it configurable as possible.

How does it work

The basic idea is that the content creator writes their posts in markdown language (like this readme file). The markdown will then be translated into HTML and displayed to the client. This gives an easy entry to writing posts with all the flexibility markdown has. This also includes source code snippets. Highlighting is done via highlight.js with the GitHub theme.

Features

  • Modern Markdown Editor - Write blog posts with a feature-rich markdown editor
  • Bookmarks - Allow readers to save their favorite articles
  • Drafts - Save work in progress and continue later
  • Scheduled Publishing - Plan ahead and publish automatically
  • Similar Blog Posts - Recommend related content to readers
  • Comments - Enable discussions
  • Media Upload - Easily include images in your posts (Azure Blob Storage and CDN Support)
  • SEO Optimization - Improve search engine visibility
  • Tag and Category System - Organize content effectively
  • Search Functionality - Help readers find specific content
  • Responsive Design - Optimal viewing on all devices
  • About Me Page - Customizable profile page that showcases skills and experience
  • RSS Feed - Allow readers to subscribe to content updates
  • Visit Counter - Get visitor counters for each blog post in the internal dashboard

In Action

overview

Documentation

Installation

License

This project is released under the terms of the MIT License.

Support & Contributing

Thanks to all contributors and people that are creating bug-reports and valuable input:

Supporters

Try it out with Codespaces

This repository offers a GitHub Codespace where you can easily run and modify the Blog completely in your browser, no IDE or local .net installation needed.

Open in GitHub Codespaces

Resources

You want a visual walkthrough through the features and details? The awesome @ncosentino / DevLeader has a YouTube video/series: