this post was submitted on 26 Jul 2023
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Well I went ahead and did a mastadon. No clue what I am doing, but.. Woohoo?
I'm chamrsdeluxe@mastadon.social there too I guess. Idk
You'd want to include your instance as part of your handle. I know, it's not as intuitive as a centralized service, but it is a requirement, especially when sharing the name elsewhere. So, your Lemmy account is chamrsdeluxe@lemmy.world. Folks on lemmy.world don't need that, but folks on another instance (like me) would. I can get it from clicking your username, but there's no way to figure it out for a different platform from here.
If you type it like this you'll get an instance agnostic link (at least on instances v0.18 and above, not necessarily in apps): /u/ChamrsDeluxe@lemmy.world.
You can also select from a dropdown box on the website to send a mention, however this link goes to their instance rather than your own: @ChamrsDeluxe@lemmy.world. The code for this is
[@ChamrsDeluxe@lemmy.world](https://lemmy.world/u/ChamrsDeluxe)
, you can type this manually and replace any link text in between the square brackets, so generally[link text](https://userinstance/u/user)
.The old pre-0.17 instance agnostic links were
[link text](/c/community@instance)
or[link text](/u/user@instance)
, but the new versions will automatically generate without link code:/c/community@instance
!community@instance
/u/user@instance
(does not send a mention)Also, kbin doesn't federate properly. You might not even see this comment over there...
If I'm reading this right there are two ways to indicate a user including its instance:
/u/username@example.com
@username@example.com
Which one is the recommended one?
The first one will generate a link automatically with no code (on lemmy v0.18 and above, not necessarily in apps - it doesn't seem to work in Jerboa currently). This link is instance agnostic, meaning the viewer sees a link in their own instance, rather than the
example.com
instance. This means you can send them a DM, or open their comments and reply to them.The second one isn't enough on its own, it needs to be in the form
[link text](https://example.com/u/user)
. However, if you start typing@user@example.com
on the website, a pop up box will allow you to select the user and generate the link code for you - it will give you[@user@example.com](https://example.com/u/user)
. This version is not agnostic, it takes you to the user's instance, however it does send a mention to the user's inbox.Hopefully in a future update they will combine these two, so that an agnostic link will also send a mention, and so the mention link will auto-generate and be agnostic. Right now, one is for linking to a profile you want to interact with, the other is for calling that person into the thread with a mention.
Edit: Just for a little more fun variation, it looks like Jerboa handles the
@user@instance
link as if it were instance agnostic. On the website it opens the user's instance.Yes, but this doesn't have anything to do with mastodon which was my point. You need to include the instance in your mastodon handle. Which I see you've gone back and edited now, but that was my whole point. I didn't need a lesson on something I literally just demonstrated I know about.
That's all well and good, but I was telling them to include the instance for their mastodon handle, which they've gone back and edited to include it now.
Yeah I know. But we're on lemmy here, so it's good to know.
Mastodon might not do that sort of thing, and kbin is different again. Tbh I'm surprised you even got my last comment (although it seems like you got it late) as most of the time kbin and lemmy don't federate properly through threads. For example, I was unable to reply to you on my phone in Jerboa, and on the website it doesn't work unless I specifically select English as the language.
You're not done yet - you need to sign up on all the instances!! Then you'll really not know what you're doing!
Followed!