# GitHub Badge ## Summary Displays information from GitHub for a specified user. ![drop](./assets/1.png) ## Used SharePoint Framework Version ![drop](https://img.shields.io/badge/version-GA-green.svg) ## Applies to * [SharePoint Framework](https://docs.microsoft.com/sharepoint/dev/spfx/sharepoint-framework-overview) * [Office 365 tenant](https://docs.microsoft.com/sharepoint/dev/spfx/set-up-your-development-environment) ## Prerequisites None ## Solution Solution|Author(s) --------|--------- js-GitHubBadge | Eric Skaggs [@skaggej](https://www.twitter.com/skaggej) ## Version history Version|Date|Comments -------|----|-------- 1.0 | April 18, 2019 | Initial release ## Disclaimer **THIS CODE IS PROVIDED *AS IS* WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, MERCHANTABILITY, OR NON-INFRINGEMENT.** --- ## Minimal Path to Awesome - Clone this repository - in the command line run: - `npm install` - `gulp serve` > Include any additional steps as needed. ## Features It's not the prettiest thing in the world, but the goal here was to create a web part that demonstrates something a bit beyond the standard "Hello, World!" web part in which we change some HTML. This sample shows how to pull in data from somewhere without authentication and without over-complicating things. Future samples will refactor this into something more professional that follows recommended coding patterns and practices and leverage modern frameworks. Ultimately, this sample along with its yet-to-be-created future samples could be a useful teaching tool to developers new to SPFx as well as developers who aren't well-versed in SPFx coding patterns or the various frameworks available.