Message from @Existence is identity
Discord ID: 508452001625931776
still doesnt wokr
weird
speaking of minds.. Is it me or is there no way to remove search term #'s once you entered them?
Ohhh! Dang. I have never published it.
https://www.minds.com/UndeadMockingbird/blog/fancy-syntax-highlighting-889099578585743360
lmao
No wonder I haven't gotten any traffic on it - I never published it. Derp
This is Mani, the Gnostic Persian Jesus.
Oh no no no no no
@Vesdii I would get the Discord SDK from the marketplace of NuGet.
Its another incel dude
Mmmmm, look at those lips
i still dont understand NuGet
Create a Console project in Visual Studio, then add a reference to the Discord assembly.
aight
From there, you can instantiate the wrapper with your credentials, or use methods like WebHooks, which requires a URL that you can create from your Discord server.
That URL already has a token embedded in it for authentication, etc.
You can link the web hook to a particular channel, for example, to make posts on an account's behalf.
GitHub has a method out of the box to post updates to a repository to your Discord.
idk what wrappers or webhooks are
i know a good amount of C# code, just not really...programming concepts.
here's some display of my ability: https://github.com/vesdii
Okay, I blocked you.
lol
Sorry, but I don't like your avatar.
👌🏿
👌
Nah, I followed you.
since when can you follow on github
eh, idk anything
I am not sure how the latest Visual Studio works, but I would consult these sources in this order:
1.) Package search in Visual Studio.
2.) Market place/NuGet
3.) Discord website to download .NET SDK
Actually, no. Let's look at their official web site first, before we install some random crud.
First, create an application, here: https://discordapp.com/developers/applications
done
It will give you the usual stuff, like an API key and all the other client stuff.
the bot is already on my server
Here is one SDK https://github.com/suicvne/DiscordSharp