Fork of Tusky to match Chinwag design and provide better visual accessibility. https://social.chinwag.org
Find a file
2017-08-11 15:38:36 -04:00
app remove metadata files of jsoup library from final build 2017-08-11 19:24:03 +02:00
assets Adds F-Droid badge to README.md. 2017-07-14 19:56:49 -04:00
gradle/wrapper Prettify profiles, add floating follow/unfollow button to them 2017-03-06 20:48:31 +01:00
.gitignore Remove .idea files 2017-01-03 19:30:20 -08:00
build.gradle upgrade to Android Api 26, update dependencies 2017-08-03 17:01:02 +02:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Fixes a couple of typos. 2017-04-26 03:38:49 -04:00
gradle.properties added README.md and missing files 2017-01-02 20:37:38 -05:00
gradlew added README.md and missing files 2017-01-02 20:37:38 -05:00
gradlew.bat added README.md and missing files 2017-01-02 20:37:38 -05:00
LICENSE.txt License change back to GPL 3 2017-04-09 20:12:31 -04:00
README.md Removes outdated references to the unused Tusky API. 2017-07-27 01:18:27 -04:00
settings.gradle added README.md and missing files 2017-01-02 20:37:38 -05:00

Tusky

Tusky is a beautiful Android client for Mastodon. Mastodon is a GNU social-compatible federated social network. That means not one entity controls the whole network, rather, like e-mail, volunteers and organisations operate their own independent servers, users from which can all interact with each other seamlessly.

Features

  • Material Design
  • Most Mastodon APIs implemented
  • Push notifications

Head of development

My Mastodon account is Vavassor@mastodon.social.

Get it on F-Droid Get it on Google Play Available at Amazon

Building

The most basic things needed are the Java Development Kit 7 or higher and the Android SDK.

The project uses the Gradle build system. Android studio uses Gradle by default, so it'd be straightforward to import this repository using your chosen version control software from the menu:

VCS > Checkout from version control > Git/SVN/Mercurial

After making it into an android studio project you can build/run as you wish.

It's also possible to build using Gradle by itself on the command line if you have it installed and configured. This repository includes a gradle wrapper script that can be used, following this guide Build You App On The Command Line.

The project's gradle files describe its building needs more in-depth and dependencies can be found in app/build.gradle.

Firebase

This app uses Firebase's Crash Reporting. So, in order to build with your own Firebase project, associate it with the build by replacing google-services.json file in the app directory with one from your Firebase console.