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You know all of those code screenshots you see on Twitter? Though the code's usually impressive, we saw room for improvement in the aesthetic department. Carbon makes it easy to create and share beautiful images of your source code. So what are you waiting for? Go impress all of your followers with your newfound design prowess.
- Customization. Customize things like your image's syntax theme, font style, and more
- Share quickly. Save your image or a link with one click
- Save snippets. Create an account to save snippets for later. Shared snippets are automatically unfurled on Twitter and Slack.
There are a few different ways to import code into Carbon:
- Drop a file onto the editor
- Append a GitHub gist ID to the URL (e.g.
carbon.now.sh/<gist_id_goes_here>
) - Or just start typing!
Once you've got all of your code into Carbon, you can customize your image by changing the syntax theme, background color, window theme, padding, shadows, fonts, and more.
After you've customized your image you can share your snippet in a number of ways
Sharing a saved snippet will automatically unfurl the image on platforms like Twitter and Slack. This lets users see your creation, while also giving them access to the source code via the link. Better yet, if you need to make an update, simply follow the link yourself to edit the snippet directly.
To create a saved snippet:
- Login using the "Sign in/Sign up" button
- Edit as you normally would — your snippet will get saved automatically
- Copy the URL from your browser window and share away!
This is the recommended method sharing Carbon on your own website or blog. Readers can even copy the code with the click of a button.
You can embed any Carbon snippet in your website directly using the carbon.now.sh/embed
URL. The "Copy Menu" lets you quickly copy the correct iFrame snippet, or the encoded URL for embedding on platforms like Medium.
Finally, you can also embed saved snippets or GitHub gists using carbon.now.sh/embed/:id
.
The Tweet button will not only share the image on Twitter, but it will also correctly encode the alt
text to ensure your images are accessible. However, if you want to tweet image yourself, please check out how to make your Twitter images accessible.
Carbon supports downloading your image as a PNG and SVG. You can also click Export → Open
to open your image directly in the browser. Finally, you can copy the Carbon image directly to your clipboard by going to Copy → Image
.
If you are using Google Chrome, or another browser that supports Progressive Web Apps, you can install Carbon for use offline by:
- Visit carbon.now.sh
- Click your browser's settings menu
- Click "Install Carbon..."
Check out these projects our awesome community has created:
- IntelliJ IDEA
carbon-now-sh
- Open up the selection in your current IntelliJ IDEA file in Carbon through a context menu - Atom
carbon-now-sh
- Open up your current Atom file in Carbon withshift-cmd-A
- VS Code
carbon-now-sh
- Open up your current VS Code file in Carbon with commandcarbon
- Sublime Text 3
carbon-now-sh
- Open up the selection in your current Sublime Text 3 file with a custom bound key - Vim
carbon-now-sh
- Open up the selection in your current Vim/Neovim using functionCarbonNowSh()
- Emacs
carbon-now-sh
- Open up the selection in your current Emacs using interactive functioncarbon-now-sh
- Xcode
carbon-now-sh
- Open up your current selection incarbon.now.sh
- Xcode
nef
- This Xcode extension enables you to export a code selection as a Carbon snippet in a single action
- CLI
carbon-now-cli
- Open a file in Carbon or download it directly usingcarbon-now
, featuring an interactive mode, selective highlighting and more - Carbonize - A macOS wrapper with extended native features
- CodeExpander - A smart GitHub gist client with the TextExpander features
nef
- Export multiple Carbon code snippets fromXcode Playground
.@carbonshbot
- A Telegram chatbot wich takes in a code snippet or gist URL and generates an Carbon image- R
carbonate
- Iteratively manipulate image aesthetics inR
and either open in Carbon or download directly.
- "CS 101 - An Introduction to Computational Thinking" - a computer science textbook by Sarbo Roy.
Carbon is a project by:
- Mike Fix (@mfix22)
- Brian Dennis (@briandennis)
- Jake Dexheimer (@jakedex)
Pull requests are welcome! Please see our contributing guidelines for more details.
Does your company use Carbon? Consider sponsoring the project to fund new features, bug fixes, and more.
Love using Carbon? Consider supporting the project to fund new features and improvements
▲ Vercel for sponsoring Carbon's hosting.
Thanks goes out to all these wonderful people (emoji key):