Create Personal Portfolio Using Github Api with Blog
Ariful Alam
Posted on August 27, 2021
For a developer, a personal portfolio plays an important role to showcase his/her works, reach to potential clients or land a job. But making it requires a tremendous amount of works and time. Also maintaining it manually with the latest project is a pain.
What if you could create your portfolio in 5 minutes just by providing your Github username and even host it without any cost? Do you want to display your skills, job history, education history, or even dev.to posts to your website? Then you are in right place.
Introducing GitProfile to kickstart your personal portfolio with Github Api and blog.
GitProfile is a powerful portfolio builder that allows you to create a stunning and personalized portfolio site in minutes, even if you have no coding experience. Simply provide your GitHub username, and GitProfile will automatically generate a portfolio. Best of all, you can easily deploy your portfolio to GitHub Pages with just a few clicks, making it accessible to the world in no time.
GitProfile is an easy-to-customize personal dev portfolio template that is created with React.js. When you manage the code in a GitHub repository, it will automatically render a webpage with the owner's profile information, including a photo, bio, and repositories. Also, it includes space to highlight your details, job history, education history, skills, and recent blog posts.
It's all possible using GitHub API (for automatically populating your website with content) and Article-api (for fetching recent blog posts).
These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes.
You'll need Git and Node.js (which comes with npm) installed on your computer.
Fork the repo so you have your own project to customize. A "fork" is a copy of a repository.
Once you've found a home for your forked repository, clone it.
Change into your new directory.
cd gitprofile
Install dependencies
npm install
Start the development server
npm start
๐จ Customization
All the magic happens in the file src/config. Open it and modify it according to your preference.
These are the default values:
config.js
// config.jsmodule.exports={github:{username:'arifszn',// Your GitHub org/user name. (Required)sortBy:'stars',// stars | updatedlimit:8,// How many projects to display.exclude:{forks:false,// Forked projects will not be displayed if set to true.projects:[]// These projects will not be displayed. example: ['my-project1', 'my-project2']}},social:{linkedin:'',twitter:'',facebook:'',dribbble:'',behance:'',medium:'',devto:'',website:'',email:''},skills:['JavaScript','React.js',],experiences:[{company:'Company name 1',position:'Software Engineer',from:'July 2019',to:'Present'},{company:'Company name 2',position:'Jr. Software Engineer',from:'January 2019',to:' June 2019'}],education:[{institution:'Institution name 1',degree:'Bachelor of Science',from:'2015',to:'2019'},{institution:'Institution name 2',degree:'Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC)',from:'2012',to:'2014',}],blog:{// Display blog posts from your medium or dev.to account. (Optional)source:'dev.to',// medium | dev.tousername:'arifszn',limit:5// How many posts to display. Max is 10.},googleAnalytics:{// GA3 tracking id/GA4 tag idid:''// UA-XXXXXXXXX-X | G-XXXXXXXXXX},themeConfig:{default:'light',// Hides the theme change switch// Useful if you want to support a single color modedisableSwitch:false,// Should we use the prefers-color-scheme media-query,// using user system preferences, instead of the hardcoded defaultrespectPrefersColorScheme:true,// Available themes. To remove any theme, exclude from here.themes:['light','dark','cupcake','bumblebee','emerald','corporate','synthwave','retro','cyberpunk','valentine','halloween','garden','forest','aqua','lofi','pastel','fantasy','wireframe','black','luxury','dracula']}}
Themes
There are 21 themes available that can be selected from the dropdown.
Besides tracking visitors, GitProfile will track click events on projects and blog posts, and send them to Google Analytics.
Meta Tags
Meta tags will be auto-generated from configs dynamically. However, you can also manually add meta tags in public\index.html
Avatar and Bio
Your github avatar and bio will be displayed here.
Social Links
GitProfile supports linking your social media services you're using, including LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, Dribbble, Behance, Medium, dev.to, personal website, and email.
// config.jsmodule.exports={// ...experiences:[{company:'Company name 1',position:'Software Engineer',from:'July 2019',to:'Present'},{company:'Company name 2',position:'Jr. Software Engineer',from:'January 2019',to:' June 2019'}],}
Empty array will hide the experience section.
Education
Provide your education history in education.
// config.jsmodule.exports={// ...education:[{institution:'Institution name 1',degree:'Bachelor of Science',from:'2015',to:'2019'},{institution:'Institution name 2',degree:'Higher Secondary Certificate (HSC)',from:'2012',to:'2014',}],}
Empty array will hide the education section.
Projects
Your public repo from github will be displayed here automatically. You can limit how many projects do you want to be displayed. Also, you can hide forked or specific repo.
If you have medium or dev.to account, you can show your recent blog posts in here just by providing your medium/dev.to username. You can limit how many posts to display (Max is 10).
Once you are done with your setup and have completed all steps above, you need to put your website online! The fastest approach is to use GitHub Pages which is completely free.
1. Github Pages:
Rename your forked repository to username.github.io, where username is your GitHub username (or organization name).
Open package.json, and change homepage's value to username.github.io.
If you see README.md at username.github.io, be sure to change your GitHub Page's source to gh-pages branch. See how to.
Your personal portfolio will be live at username.github.io. For more info, visit here.
2. Other: You can also host your website to Netlify, Vercel, Heroku, or other popular services. Please refer to this doc for a detailed deployment guide.