A little experiment to pull content from the Trello API and use it to populate content on a simple web site.
- Production: https://hellotrello.netlify.app
- Staging: https://stage--hellotrello.netlify.app
The site is populated from a list of cards in a public (but read only) Trello board
Why? 👉 https://twitter.com/philhawksworth/status/1253696940170186754
Each card in Trello populates a section of the page. And since Trello supports markdown, we can also do some simple text formatting with the markdown we get from the cards API.
To clone this repo, create a new Netlify site and start making changes click the button below and follow the instructions.
Whenever we make changes in the Published list, Trello triggers a Netlify build hook which initiates a new build and deployment, updating the site.
We can use the Trello API to create the webhook which will trigger a new build automatically when changes are made to the board.
- Create a new Build Hook in your Netlify site admin
- Register your Build Hook as a webhook with Trello using the utility below.
# Register a webhook with Trello, to invoke a build whenever the board is updated
npm run hook --url https://api.netlify.com/build_hooks/XXXXX
Trello paid accounts can have buttons which can make HTTP Post requests, which means we cold have a button which initiates a site deployment on Netlify via a build hook instead of for every update on the board.
Netlify lets you create an unlimited number of environments based on git branches. Each gets its own URL. This example maps the labels on the Trello cards to the different branches, so we event get a simple publishing workflow.