ReactJS Tutorial: Embed Your YouTube and Medium RSS Feeds Into Your Website

Written by hellojuni | Published 2021/08/25
Tech Story Tags: rss | medium | youtube | javascript | react | web-development | website-development | coding | web-monetization

TLDR ReactJS Tutorial: Embed Your YouTube and Medium RSS Feeds Into Your Website. How to Embed Medium RSS feed or YouTube RSS feed in a websites? How to embed your blog posts or videos to social media? How do you do it? Use ReactJS and React Hook to embed the results to your sites. ReactJS to convert RSS URL link to JSON so that it can be fetched, then you can embed results. React Hook is a front-end library/ framework that uses ReactJS, Material UI and ReactJS.via the TL;DR App

If you are thinking about building your own landing page or personal portfolio which can show off all your works (your blog posts from Medium or your YouTube channel) to the world. Then, you may ask the solutions for this question “How to embed Medium RSS feed or YouTube RSS feed in my websites.” Luckily, I came with this solution for you in this tutorial. It is exciting for me to share it here, and I hope you are also excited. Okay, let’s get started!
What we will explore in this topic:
  • How to Embed Medium RSS Feed in a Website
  • How to Embed YouTube RSS Feed in a Website
Technologies I am using for this tutorial:
  • ReactJS (You can use another front-end library/ framework as you like)
  • RSS to JSON to convert RSS URL link to JSON data so that it can be fetched, then you can embed the results to your sites. (you can read their documentation here)
  • Material UI (this is just my personal preference for UI design in React App, you can use another front-end library based on your need)
  • Optional: react-share dependency package to share your blog posts or videos to social media (I used Facebook for this Demo)

1. How to Embed Medium RSS Feed in a Website

First, assign your mediumRSSFeed variable to its string value (URL link) like this:
const mediumRssFeed = “https://api.rss2json.com/v1/api.json?rss_url=https://medium.com/feed/@YOUR_MEDIUM_PROFILE_NAME_HERE”
To check if this link is correct, you can copy this URL link with your Medium Profile Name to a blank browser, then hit Enter. If you can see the JSON objects, it means this link is correct. This should be shown like this:
Then, fetch your articles’ data as below:
const MAX_ARTICLES = 10;
const [articles, setArticles] = useState();
useEffect(() => {
const loadArticles = async () => {
fetch(mediumRssFeed, { headers: { Accept: “application/json” } })
.then((res) => res.json())
.then((data) => data.items.filter((item) => item.title.length > 0))
.then((newArticles) => newArticles.slice(0, MAX_ARTICLES))
.then((articles) => setArticles(articles))
.catch((error) => console.log(error));
};
loadArticles();
}, [MAX_ARTICLES]);
Because I used React Hook for this Demo, you can see that I make use of the useState() and useEffect() function to fetch this data. I set MAX_ARTICLES=10 to limit the number of articles shown on my page, but you can set it to a different number as you like. For the max-count over 10, you have to signup/login to rss2json to get the API key as they said, “Count of feed items to return, default is 10 (api_key is required to use this parameter).
Then, the map() function will help to return each item in the array of articles, like this:
{articles
? articles.map((item) => (
<a
className="link"
href={item.link}
target="_blank"
rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer"
title={item.title}
aria-label={item.link}
key={item.link}
>
<Card className={classes.root}>
<CardActionArea>
<CardMedia
className={classes.media}
image={item.thumbnail}
title={item.title}
/>
<CardContent>
<Typography gutterBottom variant="h5" component="h2">
{item.title}
</Typography>
<Typography
variant="body2"
color="textSecondary"
component="p"
>
{parseDate(item.pubDate)}
</Typography>
</CardContent>
</CardActionArea>
<CardActions>
<FacebookShareButton url={item.link}>
<FacebookIcon size={32} round={true} />
</FacebookShareButton>
<Button size="small" color="primary">
Learn More
</Button>
</CardActions>
</Card>
</a>
))
: "no article shown"}
In this Demo, I used the helper function parseDate() for item.pubDate to format the date for it easier to read. I added this function in the file name util.js such as below:
export const parseDate = (date) => {
const year = date.substring(0, 4);
const month = date.substring(5, 7);
const day = date.substring(8, 10);
switch (month) {
case "01":
return day + " January " + year;
case "02":
return day + " February " + year;
case "03":
return day + " March " + year;
case "04":
return day + " April " + year;
case "05":
return day + " May " + year;
case "06":
return day + " June " + year;
case "07":
return day + " July " + year;
case "08":
return day + " August " + year;
case "09":
return day + " September " + year;
case "10":
return day + " October " + year;
case "11":
return day + " November " + year;
case "12":
return day + " December " + year;
default:
return "No publication date";
}
};
You can custom this format based on your need.
Now your articles will be shown on your page like this. See Demo here:

2. How to Embed YouTube RSS Feed in a Website

Similarly, I also used the same technology for the demo. The only different part here is the RSS Feed URL link. This data should look like the below structure:
const youtubeRssFeed= “https://api.rss2json.com/v1/api.json?rss_url=https://youtube.com/feeds/videos.xml?channel_id=YOUR_CHANNEL_ID_HERE”
You also can check if it is the correct link by following the above method. Then you can fetch your YouTube videos’ data as below:
const MAX_VIDEOS = 10;
const [videos, setVideos] = useState();
useEffect(() => {
const loadVideos = async () => {
fetch(youtubeRssFeed, { headers: { Accept: “application/json” } })
.then((res) => res.json())
.then((data) => data.items.filter((item) => item.title.length > 0))
.then((newVideos) => newVideos.slice(0, MAX_VIDEOS))
.then((videos) => setVideos(videos))
.catch((error) => console.log(error));
};
loadVideos();
}, [MAX_VIDEOS]);
Once again, I also set my MAX_VIDEOS=10 to limit the number of videos shown on my page. You can set it to another number based on your choice. For the max-count over 10, you have to signup/login to rss2json to get the API key as they said, “Count of feed items to return, default is 10 (api_key is required to use this parameter).
Also, the map() function will help to return each item in the array of videoslike this:
{videos
? videos.map((item) => (
<a
className="link"
href={item.link}
target="_blank"
rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer"
title={item.title}
aria-label={item.link}
key={item.link}
>
<Card className={classes.root}>
<CardActionArea>
<CardMedia
className={classes.media}
image={item.thumbnail}
title={item.title}
/>
<CardContent>
<Typography gutterBottom variant="h5" component="h2">
{item.title}
</Typography>
<Typography
variant="body2"
color="textSecondary"
component="p"
>
{parseDate(item.pubDate)}
</Typography>
</CardContent>
</CardActionArea>
<CardActions>
<FacebookShareButton url={item.link}>
<FacebookIcon size={32} round={true} />
</FacebookShareButton>
<Button size="small" color="primary">
Learn More
</Button>
</CardActions>
</Card>
</a>
))
Now, your YouTube videos are embedded and shown similarly like this Demo:
Admire your work and enjoy!
That’s it for this short tutorial. I hope you found this useful. Let me know if you need further help on this. Thanks for reading, and have a fun day!

Written by hellojuni | A self-taught developer and a curious soul on her journey to explore the beauty of [coding].
Published by HackerNoon on 2021/08/25