This mode was written to work with Tumblr's API v1. This package won't work with the newest, oAuth-only API. In the meantime you might want to use Tumblesocks.
Tumble is a mode for interacting with Tumblr inside Emacs. It currently supports the following types of posts:
- Text
- Quote
- Link
- Chat
- Photo
- Audio
- Video (only through embed)
You can start tumbling by using the following functions:
tumble-text-from-region
tumble-text-from-buffer
tumble-quote-from-region
tumble-link
tumble-link-with-description
tumble-chat-from-region
tumble-chat-from-buffer
tumble-photo-from-url
tumble-photo-from-file
tumble-audio
tumble-video-from-url
Posts can either be published or saved as drafts, you'll be prompted when you upload them. If you leave the 'State' field empty the post will be published.
Read tumble.el for more information about each function.
Download Tumble to some directory:
$ git clone git://github.com/febuiles/tumble.git
Add it to your load list and require it:
(add-to-list 'load-path "~/some_directory/tumble")
(require 'tumble)
At this point you can, either set your Tubmblr account info on your .emacs file:
tumble-email: your account e-mail
tumble-password: your account password
tumble-url: your account url (the main blog url)
Or just post without setting them, Tumble will prompt you for your account details when you try to make a post.
If you want to post to a group or secondary blog, you should instead
set the tumble-group
variable.
You can also customize the format of the post by modifying the
tumble-format
variable. Tumble uses Markdown as default for posting.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Check tumble.el for more information.
Fork freely!
- Tumble now prompts you for login credentials thanks to Quildreen Motta [email protected].
- Johan Persson [email protected] added support for saving posts as drafts.