#blogging
3 APIs with this tag
Hive API
Live data for the Hive blockchain social network, served straight from Hive's public JSON-RPC nodes — no key, no account, nothing cached. Hive is a decentralised blogging and social platform where posts and votes live on-chain and earn crypto rewards. The account endpoint resolves a username to its profile: display name, reputation score, follower and following counts, post count, bio, location, website and join date — @gtg ("Gandalf the Grey") has a 76 reputation and over ten thousand followers. The posts endpoint returns a user's blog posts with each post's up-vote count, the HBD payout it earned, the comment count, the tags and a link. The trending endpoint returns the platform's trending (or hot, new or top-paid) posts right now, optionally filtered by tag — the front page of Hive. This is the profile-posts-and-trends layer for any decentralised-social, blogging or web3 app. Live from the Hive blockchain, nothing stored. Distinct from other social and centralised-blog APIs — this is the on-chain Hive network. 4 endpoints.
api.oanor.com/hive-api
Substack API
Live data for any Substack publication, served straight from the publication's own public API — no key, nothing cached. Substack is the newsletter-and-blogging social platform; this reads a writer's public posts and their engagement. The posts endpoint returns a publication's recent or top posts with the title, subtitle, slug, publish date, post type (newsletter, podcast or thread), audience (free or paywalled), the heart-reaction count, the comment count, the word count and the cover image — Noah Smith's Noahpinion shows posts pulling hundreds of reactions and dozens of comments. The search endpoint searches a publication's archive by keyword. The post endpoint returns one post in full, including a plain-text excerpt of the body, its reactions and comment count. Point it at any publication by its Substack subdomain (noahpinion) or its custom domain (astralcodexten.com) and it follows the publication wherever it lives. This is the writer-and-post engagement layer for any media-monitoring, newsletter-analytics, reading or social app. Live from Substack, nothing stored. Distinct from dev-community and microblog APIs — this is Substack newsletter posts and their engagement. 4 endpoints.
api.oanor.com/substack-api
DEV (dev.to) API
The DEV Community (dev.to) as an API, powered by the official open-source Forem platform API. DEV is one of the largest communities of software developers writing and sharing articles, tutorials and discussions. This API gives clean, read-only access to that content. /v1/articles browses and filters published articles — by tag (tag=javascript), by author (username=ben), by most-reacted over a period (top=7 for the best of the last week), or by feed state (fresh, rising) — with pagination; each result carries the title, description, canonical URL, tag list, positive-reaction and comment counts, estimated reading time, cover image and author summary. /v1/article?id=5 returns a single article with its complete Markdown body, canonical URL and author social links — everything needed to render or syndicate the full post. /v1/user?username=ben returns a member's public profile: display name, bio/summary, location, join date, linked Twitter/GitHub/website and avatar. /v1/tags lists the platform's popular tags for discovery. Article ids are numeric and stable, so links don't rot. Ideal for developer-content aggregators and newsletters, reading-list and bookmarking apps, community dashboards, "trending in tech" widgets and Discord/Slack bots. Data from the public DEV Forem API, free to use. Content is authored by the DEV community.
api.oanor.com/devto-api