Add image to Azure Devops Dashboard - azure-devops

I need to add a static image to Azure Devops dashboard. Is the easiest way to do this using the MarkDown widget?
And if so, where do I store my image to link to it in markdown? And can you please give me an example?
does the dashboard have a storage area for images, or markdown files? Or does it have to be stored somwhere in my git repository. I would prefer not to, as I am merely a scrummaster, with no easy access to git repository.
Thanks

To use a static image in your dashboard without storing the image a git repository, you can store it into your project wiki.
The trick is to:
Add an image to any wiki page
Submit your changes and close the page editor
Right-click on the image, and select the option "Copy the image's address"
Then, in your dashboard, add a MarkDown widget, in which you put the following content:
![Text](youre-image-url-address)
And that's it! :)
Beware of taking the image address after closing the wiki page editor, otherwise the link you'll get will be a blob and won't work.

Related

How to host image at https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/{path}/{filename}?

I'm a developer, I need many screenshots to put in readme.md file where to store or host it? I found out that some people use https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/{path}/{filename} to host their image and link them with readme.md file. How to put images there??
You can create a .github/images directory in your repo and add all your assets there.
Assets added here will be available on
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/{github_user_name}/{repo_name}/{branch}/.github/images/{asset_name}.{asset_extension}
Once you push .github/images directory to remote your assets should be available through the mentioned link.
And https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/ is used by GitHub to store images added in issues, PR's, etc.,
Hope it helps!
UPDATE:
You can also create an assets directory in the root of your repo and use a relative path to the image.
/assets/{asset_name}.{asset_extension}
![Alt Text](/assets/{asset_name}.{asset_extension})
With this, images can be previewed without actually pushing to remote.
Hosting on user-images.githubusercontent.com subdomain
If you do not intend to store any images in your repository, you can always use this https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/
To host your images in user-images subdomain you can do the following
Click New Issue this will open up the issue creator.
Drag and Drop or Upload your image in the body content
Wait for upload completion and copy the URL for the image.
Cancel the issue creation and continue.
But you will not have access to these images once uploaded, you cannot delete them. You can always contact GitHub Support if required to delete.
Just drag and drop your image from your local pc to github readme in editable mode.
I took a screenshot of a diagram and tried to paste it directly into a comment in GitHub and it was automatically uploaded to "https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/" and embedded as a markdown tag. Then I tried to paste the same tag into a readme.MD with the same link and worked for me.
When you are editing the readme file on github, you have to drag the file you want to add in this specific box. That worked for me. If I dropped it anywhere else, it wouldn't load.
While editing readme.md in GitHub UI, paste the image from the clipboard directly in the readme, and the image is automatically uploaded into user-images.gitHubusercontent, and the link is updated in the readme to show the image.
To add or store them just open the issues click on new issue and drag and drop your desired image in comment section and wait for it to upload in user-images.gitHubusercontent. when its done just copy that and paste it to your README.md file
You can simply put the file where you want it in yours repository, click on the file from the github.com page and left click the Raw button or right click Download button and select Copy link address. It will show the full path url, then you can just put it into any Markdown text.

Add google drive images to README.md on GitHub

Recently I joined GitHub. I am hosted some projects there.
I need to include some my GoogleDrive images in my README File. I don't know how to do that.
First, get a share-able link to your Google Drive image so anyone can view it.
Then, the GitHub-flavored markdown for an image is what you're looking for:
![optional-description-here](link-here)
This is the syntax for an image to be loaded from a link. My favorite example:
![StackOverflow logo](https://www.stackoverflowbusiness.com/hubfs/B2B-SO/images/logo-so-PRINT-4.png)
I even added a public example for you here on my GitHub

Adding Images in Azure DevOps Wiki

I'm trying to add a few images to the wiki in 1 of my Azure DevOps projects. When I use the absolute path as mentioned here https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/devops/project/wiki/markdown-guidance?view=azure-devops#images in the article, the images are not showing up. Any help?
The wiki pages get created in their own Git repository and the image files are also added there. You can browse the repos from within DevOps at; https://dev.azure.com/MyOrganisation/MyProject/_git/MyProject.wiki
The markdown path for the image should begin /.attachments/ and make sure if you are adding dimension you use =500x and not =500 if you exclude the height e.g.
![MyImage.png](/.attachments/MyImage-98765432-abcd-1234-abcd-a1234567890b.png =500x)
Add image from local machine:
In the wiki page editor, click 'Insert a file' icon and select image from your local pc, you will see mark-up something like: ![image.jpg](/.attachment/image-devOpsfileIdentifyer-withMixedAlphabetsAndDigits.jpg)
This will also displays preview in the editor.
Actually, you can now use the "Insert a file" button (represented by a paperclip icon) when editing a wiki page to upload an image.
When you upload an image this way, the image is automatically stored in the "/.attachments/" folder
For my side I just copy the image in the clipboard and after that on paste it generate automatically the markdown code
TLDR
CTRL+C and CTRL+V
When inserting a file in a Wiki, you initially get an image-url like blob:https://dev.azure.com/SOME-GUID. This url (when including the blob:-prefix, can be used to display the attached image in an img-tag.
<img src="blob:https://dev.azure.com/SOME-GUID" />
If the image is important enough to be inside a Wiki page, it's probably important enough to host it somewhere you can use it inside your wiki. Have a look at creating a public container/blob in an Azure Storage account.
EDIT:
For your specific image: right-click the image and select Copy image address. You'll get an URL like this that you can use as the src of the img-tag.
https://dev.azure.com/rubdevopson/c53ed56f-c130-470b-a6ae-3c4a93266530/_apis/git/repositories/88df06c2-f627-4953-9438-0f762d4cad3a/Items?path=%2FPartsUnlimited_docs%2Fhome.png&versionDescriptor%5BversionOptions%5D=0&versionDescriptor%5BversionType%5D=0&versionDescriptor%5Bversion%5D=master&download=false&resolveLfs=true&%24format=octetStream&api-version=5.0-preview.1

How to add screenshot to READMEs in github repository?

Is it possible to place a screenshot in README file in a GitHub repository? What's the syntax?
If you use Markdown (README.md):
Provided that you have the image in your repo, you can use a relative URL:
![Alt text](/relative/path/to/img.jpg?raw=true "Optional Title")
If you need to embed an image that's hosted elsewhere, you can use a full URL
![Alt text](http://full/path/to/img.jpg "Optional title")
GitHub recommend that you use relative links with the ?raw=true parameter to ensure forked repos point correctly.
The raw=true parameter is there in order to ensure the image you link to, will be rendered as is. That means that only the image will be linked to, not the whole GitHub interface for that respective file. See this comment for more details.
Check out an example: https://raw.github.com/altercation/solarized/master/README.md
If you use SVGs then you'll need to set the sanitize attribute to true as well: ?raw=true&sanitize=true. (Thanks #EliSherer)
Also, the documentation on relative links in README files: https://help.github.com/articles/relative-links-in-readmes
And of course the markdown docs: http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/syntax
Additionally, if you create a new branch screenshots to store the images you can avoid them being in the master working tree
You can then embed them using:
![Alt text](/../<branch name>/path/to/image.png?raw=true "Optional Title")
Even though there is already an accepted answer I would like to add another way to upload images to readme on GitHub.
You need to create issue in your repo
Drag and drop in the comment area your image
After link for the image is generated insert it to your readme
More details you can find here
I found that the path to the image in my repo did not suffice, I had to link to the image on the raw.github.com subdomain.
URL format https://raw.github.com/{USERNAME}/{REPOSITORY}/{BRANCH}/{PATH}
Markdown example ![Settings Window](https://raw.github.com/ryanmaxwell/iArrived/master/Screenshots/Settings.png)
JUNE 3, 2020 : WORKING ANSWER-
Upload your image to postimage.org
Copy Github-Markdown-Url after uploading Image
Insert in your ReadMe
One line below should be what you looking for
if your file is in repository
![ScreenShot](https://raw.github.com/{username}/{repository}/{branch}/{path})
if your file is in other external url
![ScreenShot](https://{url})
The markdown syntax for displaying images is indeed:
![image](https://{url})
BUT: How to provide the url ?
You probably do not want to clutter your repo with screenshots, they have nothing to do with code
you might not want either to deal with the hassle of making your image available on the web... (upload it to a server... ).
So... you can use this awesome trick to make github host your image file. TDLR:
create an issue on the issue list of your repo
drag and drop your screenshot on this issue
copy the markdown code that github has just created for you to display your image
paste it on your readme (or wherever you want)
http://solutionoptimist.com/2013/12/28/awesome-github-tricks/
Much simpler than adding URL
Just upload an image to the same repository,
like:
![Screenshot](screenshot.png)
add this to README
<div align="center">
<img src="/screenshots/screen1.jpg" width="400px"</img>
</div>
From March 2021, this is now supported:
Attaching files to markdown files
You can now attach files, including images, to markdown files while you're editing them in the web.
This works just like file attachments in issues and pull requests and supports the same file types.
Just drag and drag, click and select, or paste.
Note: If you add an image to a markdown file, anyone can view the anonymized image URL without authentication, even if the markdown file is in a private repository.
To keep images private, serve them from a private network or server that requires authentication.
For more information on anonymized URLs see "About anonymized image URLs".
Markdown: ![Screenshot](http://url/to/img.png)
Create an issue regarding adding images
Add the image by drag and drop or by file chooser
Then copy image source
Now add ![Screenshot](http://url/to/img.png) to your README.md file
Done!
Alternatively you can use some image hosting site like imgur and get it's url and add it in your README.md file or you can use some static file hosting too.
Sample issue
Method 1->Markdown way
![Alt Text](https://raw.github.com/{USERNAME}/{REPOSITORY}/{BRANCH}/{PATH})
Method 2->HTML way
<img src="https://link(format same as above)" width="100" height="100"/>
or
<img src="https://link" style=" width:100px ; height:100px " />
Note-> If you don't want to style your image i.e resize remove the style part
For me, the relative path worked out very well.
How I did this:
In my current md file where I wanted to use a picture from another directory, I used a relative path like this - consider following points.
md file loc: base dir -> _post -> current_file.md
& picture file loc which I wanted to use: base dir -> _asset -> picture_to_use.jpeg
What the statement I used was on current_file.md file:
![your-pic-caption-name](../_asset/picture_to_use.jpeg)
Note - before this, I was using direct _asset but Ideally, it so starts from ../_asset/and-so-no
reference - https://docs.github.com/en/github/creating-cloning-and-archiving-repositories/creating-a-repository-on-github/about-readmes
Add ![ScreenShot](screenshot.png) in the readme markdown as mentioned by many above. Replace screenshot.png with the name of the image you uploaded in your repository.
But here is a newbie tip when you upload the image (as I made this mistake myself):
ensure that your image name does not contain spaces. My original image was saved as "Screenshot day month year id.png". If you don't change the name to something like contentofimage.png, it won't appear as an image in your readme file.
I googled a few similar questions and did not see any answers with my problem and its quite simple/easy solution.
Google Cloud Storage - a slightly different approach to images in READMEs
Here goes: like the OP, I wanted an image in my Github README, and, knowing the Markdown syntax for doing so, typed it in:
![My Image](https://storage.cloud.google.com/${MY_BUCKET}/${MY_IMAGE}
You need to complete the actual substitutions above (e.g. MY_IMAGE=image.jpg) for this to work.
But, wait...failure--there's no actual rendered photo! And the link is exactly as given by Google Storage!
Github camo - Anonymous Images
Github hosts your images anonymously, yay! However, this presents an issue for Google storage assets. You need to get the generated url from your Google Cloud Console.
I'm sure there's a smoother way, however, simply visit your given URL endpoint and copy the long URL. Details:
Instructions
Visit your storage console: https://console.cloud.google.com/storage/browser/${MY_BUCKET}?project=${MY_PROJECT}
Click on the image you'd like to display in Github (this brings up the "Object Details" page)
Copy pasta that URL (the one starting with https not gs) into a new browser tab/window
Copy pasta the new generated URL -- it should be longer -- from your new browser tab/window into your Github README file
Hopefully this helps speed up and clarify this issue for anyone else.
Please fallow this four step,
this worked for me
1-Create a new issue on GitHub.
2-Drag-and-drop an image onto the comment field or upload a photo.
3-Wait for the upload process to finish.
4-Copy the URL and use it in your Markdown files on GitHub (use that generated URL in your repository's readme).
First, create a directory(folder) in the root of your local repo that will contain the screenshots you want added. Let’s call the name of this directory screenshots. Place the images (JPEG, PNG, GIF,` etc) you want to add into this directory.
Android Studio Workspace Screenshot
Secondly, you need to add a link to each image into your README. So, if I have images named 1_ArtistsActivity.png and 2_AlbumsActivity.png in my screenshots directory, I will add their links like so:
<img src="screenshots/1_ArtistsActivity.png" height="400" alt="Screenshot"/> <img src=“screenshots/2_AlbumsActivity.png" height="400" alt="Screenshot"/>
If you want each screenshot on a separate line, write their links on separate lines. However, it’s better if you write all the links in one line, separated by space only. It might actually not look too good but by doing so GitHub automatically arranges them for you.
Finally, commit your changes and push it!
To me the best way is -
Create an new issue with that repository on github and then upload the file in gif format.To convert video files into gif format you can use this website http://www.online-convert.com/
Submit the newly created issue.
Copy the address of the uploaded file
Finally in your README file put ![demo](COPIED ADDRESS)
Hope this will help .
Add image in repository from upload file option then in README file
![Alt text]("enter image url of repositoryhere")
Create a New issue by clicking on the green button in the upper right corner. Take a screenshot of whatever you need and paste it into the issue message (CMD+V on Mac or CTR+V on Windows).
My image had space in the name, e.g. Pasted image 20221006123035.png, and that was causing a problem from me, and I lost some time fixing it. If someone has the same issue, then here are the steps
I uploaded the image via upload option
Then clicked on the image in the file browsing UI of the website.
The image is opened in the browser. From the browser's URL I copied the url of the image. You can copy the whole path, or relative to your .md file
Now insert that link to the .md file like ![overview](Pasted%20image%2020221006123035.png)
With the images located in /screen-shots directory. The outer <div> allows the images to be positioned. Padding is achieved using <img width="desired-padding" height="0">.
<div align="center">
<img width="45%" src="screen-shots/about.PNG" alt="About screen" title="About screen"</img>
<img height="0" width="8px">
<img width="45%" src="screen-shots/list.PNG" alt="List screen" title="List screen"></img>
</div>

Embedding images inside a GitHub wiki (gollum) repository?

The Github wikis are backed by a separate git repository then the main project repository.
This post by the Github team makes it sound like you should be able to link to images stored in the wiki repository inside the wiki markup.
Images and Folders
You can now reference images hosted inside the Git repository.
I've checked out my wiki's repository and pushed a resource folder and an image into it. My question is, how do I go about using this image?
Is this even possible or have I misunderstood something?
For viewers wishing to view images on a github wiki I've found the following method to work:
Go to the "Git Access" tab inside the wiki page of your repository and retrieve the SSH path which should be some thing like: git#github.com:USER/REPO.wiki.git where USER is your account name and REPO is the repository name.
On your local machine use whichever Git command line tool you wish to cd into your local directory of choice and get the repository via
git clone git#github.com:USER/REPO.wiki.git
Now within this repository create an image directory, I'll call it "images" and put whatever images you want into the directory
And then push your wiki git directory to github
You will not be able to physically see the images in say the "Pages" tab, but if you simply reference the images in a local link you should be able to see them. Example with Markdown below:
![Alt attribute text Here](images/YOURIMAGE.ext)
You may also embed the image as a link itself by wrapping it further like so:
[![Alt attribute text Here](images/YOURIMAGE.ext)](http://Yoursite.com)
You can also add subdirectories within your local copy to help organize the wiki since the "pages" tab simply lists them out. Keep in mind, however, that even when the new directory is pushed the "pages" tab doesn't list the directory.
To use relative paths do:
[[foo.jpg]]
For more info, see the demo wiki's page on images.
None of answers seem to work when adding an image in readme.md. I've got a solution though:
If the URL of the image is:
https://github.com/Username/Repository-Name/blob/master/Directory-Inside-Repository/image.png
Replacing blob with raw gives you the URL of the raw image:
https://github.com/Username/Repository-Name/raw/master/Directory-Inside-Repository/image.png
Now, you'd embed the image using normal markdown:
![Image Alt](https://github.com/Username/Repository-Name/raw/master/Directory-Inside-Repository/image.png)
UPDATE: As of now, GitHub also serves raw images from a different sub-domain raw.github.com. So, you can also use:
https://raw.github.com/Username/Repository-Name/master/Directory-Inside-Repository/image.png
EXAMPLE: https://raw.github.com/Automattic/liveblog/master/screenshot-1.png
Relative path work for me like this:
home page of the wiki:
![text](wiki/images/someimage.png)
sub page of the wiki:
![text](images/someimage.png)
Note that when doing a preview the image will not show, I had save it.
If you want to quickly upload an image with drag/drop, you can perform the following (albeit hackish):
Create a dummy issue; drag & drop your image there; copy/paste the uploaded markdown image code to your wiki;
After you create the issue once, you can use it any number of times to do this.
Hope this helps anyone looking for a quick fix, without needing to have the image reside in the repo.
Here is a practical way to do it:
Go to any issue on github
In the comment section you can attach files, just drag/drop, select or paste your image
Copy the code/link displayed in the textarea
Paste it in the wiki
Profit !
You don't even have to create or modify any issue compared to #tiby solution !
Figured it out.
The url is formatted as follows
https://raw.github.com/wiki/username/project/pathtoimage/imagename.extension
pathtoimage is optional
James' URL format did not work for me, perhaps it has been changed. I have used:
https://github.com/username/project/wiki/pathtoimage/image.extension
Where pathtoimage is optional.
Finally got the images into repository using the method described by nerdwin and got them to display in the wiki using ![test](test.jpg)
The following markdown will reference an image in your GitHub repo from within your corresponding GitHub wiki
![My Alt Text](../blob/master/Path/ToAsset/In/Repo.png?raw=true)
The above example assumes that you have the following file structure in your repo
Path
ToAssets
In
Repo.png
For a real world example, if I wanted to reference this image in github from the corresponding wiki, I'd use this markdown
![Azure App Settings](../blob/master/TrelloWorld/TrelloWorld.Server/Assets/Azure_AppSettings.png?raw=true)
Caveats
Case matters
If you are on the special Home page of the wiki, you do not need to go up a level with the ../ In my example above, the correct link would be
For Home Page:
![Azure App Settings](blob/master/TrelloWorld/TrelloWorld.Server/Assets/Azure_AppSettings.png?raw=true)
Use the relative path
the Wiki is located at [repositoryname]/wiki
The files in the repository are located at [repositoryname]/raw/master/[file path in repository]
So just use the relative path: ../raw/master/[file path in repository]
I put both images and PDFs in my wikis. I clone the wiki and add an images and a files directory, then use the following markdown to embed image links and add file links:
Images:
[[/images/path/to/image.ext|ALT TEXT]]
The leading slash isn't necessary if your wiki pages are all at the root level, but I use subdirectories and an absolute path resolves correctly and keeps things simple.
Files:
[link text](files/path/to/file.ext "ALT TEXT")
Note, no leading slash for the wiki files path to resolve correctly as a link in this format.
I documented this with more detail in a GitHub gist
Since Feb. 2022, you can simply drag and drop, select or paste the file.
That will upload the image to your Wiki pages, and store it in https://user-images.githubusercontent.com
To embed an external image thumbnail, use the following,
![Image](<external link to the image>)
The comment from #Drew Noakes to the original question did it for me:
The syntax for the image I wanted to be displayed:
[[/images/imageName.png]]
This image was only displayed when renaming:
wikiPage.md --> wikiPage.wiki
The following folder structure was used in the wiki repository:
repository.wiki
|--wikiPage.wiki
|--images
|--imageName.png
BUT:
The syntax in .wiki differs from .md files.
Many of the answers didn't work for me, here's what finally worked:
![](../raw/master/Images/ImportantImage.png)
Using the "Markdown" editor mode and a sub-page such as:
https://github.com/project/repo/wiki/MyPage