I am also ‘Andrew’, the admin of this server. I’ll try to remember to only use this account for posting stuff.
I’ll just remove the ‘freamon’ one when the auto-generated one is up to date.
The manually-generated one had 5 missing routes, which I’ve since added.
The auto-generated one at crust has about 48 missing routes. It’s the right approach, and I’ll help out with it when I can, but - for now at least - it makes no sense to redirect people to it (either automatically or via a comment).
Some thoughts for @[email protected]
/site/instance_chooser
probably doesn’t need to be a route. It’s just the data format returned by /site/instance_chooser_search
. As a route, it’s returning the instance info for the site you’re querying, so if you want to keep it as a route, it should probably be called /site/instance_info
or something.
In the query for /site/instance_chooser_search
, nsfw
and newbie
are both booleans. With the rest of the API, these are sent as ‘true’ or ‘false’, but they are ‘yes’ and ‘no’ for this route.
The newbie
query should probably be newbie_friendly
In the response, monthsmonitored
should probably be months_monitored
There’s no way to exclude communities for the response to /topic/list
and /feed/list
: If you don’t put ‘include_communities’ in the query, it’s defaults to True, but if you put ‘include_communities=false’ in the query it ends up being True also (because the word ‘include_communities’ is in the data).
Apart from using the word ‘dragon’, I couldn’t see anything about their account that indicates it’s an alt. They used ‘I’ as a pronoun in this comment.
Maybe 23 days ago a mod saw something different.
The best way to provide
!
links that work for the most people is just to type them out as plain text, not as a hyperlink to anything.So, these communities can be found at:
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]
Also, from what I can tell, they haven’t been moved using PieFed’s community migration facility (which squishes the old remote community into a new local one and retains the history (e.g. like what happened with like [email protected] ). These are just brand new communities, starting from scratch.