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integrationHTTP Request node
integrationMedium node

HTTP Request and Medium integration

Save yourself the work of writing custom integrations for HTTP Request and Medium and use n8n instead. Build adaptable and scalable Development, Core Nodes, and Marketing workflows that work with your technology stack. All within a building experience you will love.

How to connect HTTP Request and Medium

  • Step 1: Create a new workflow
  • Step 2: Add and configure nodes
  • Step 3: Connect
  • Step 4: Customize and extend your integration
  • Step 5: Test and activate your workflow

Step 1: Create a new workflow and add the first step

In n8n, click the "Add workflow" button in the Workflows tab to create a new workflow. Add the starting point – a trigger on when your workflow should run: an app event, a schedule, a webhook call, another workflow, an AI chat, or a manual trigger. Sometimes, the HTTP Request node might already serve as your starting point.

HTTP Request and Medium integration: Create a new workflow and add the first step

Step 2: Add and configure HTTP Request and Medium nodes

You can find HTTP Request and Medium in the nodes panel. Drag them onto your workflow canvas, selecting their actions. Click each node, choose a credential, and authenticate to grant n8n access. Configure HTTP Request and Medium nodes one by one: input data on the left, parameters in the middle, and output data on the right.

HTTP Request and Medium integration: Add and configure HTTP Request and Medium nodes

Step 3: Connect HTTP Request and Medium

A connection establishes a link between HTTP Request and Medium (or vice versa) to route data through the workflow. Data flows from the output of one node to the input of another. You can have single or multiple connections for each node.

HTTP Request and Medium integration: Connect HTTP Request and Medium

Step 4: Customize and extend your HTTP Request and Medium integration

Use n8n's core nodes such as If, Split Out, Merge, and others to transform and manipulate data. Write custom JavaScript or Python in the Code node and run it as a step in your workflow. Connect HTTP Request and Medium with any of n8n’s 1000+ integrations, and incorporate advanced AI logic into your workflows.

HTTP Request and Medium integration: Customize and extend your HTTP Request and Medium integration

Step 5: Test and activate your HTTP Request and Medium workflow

Save and run the workflow to see if everything works as expected. Based on your configuration, data should flow from HTTP Request to Medium or vice versa. Easily debug your workflow: you can check past executions to isolate and fix the mistake. Once you've tested everything, make sure to save your workflow and activate it.

HTTP Request and Medium integration: Test and activate your HTTP Request and Medium workflow

Posting from Wordpress to Medium

Usage

This workflow gets all the posts from your WordPress site and sorts them into a clear format before publishing them to medium.

Step 1. Set up the HTTP node and set the URL of the source destination. This will be the URL of the blog you want to use. We shall be using https://mailsafi.com/blog for this.

Step 2. Extract the URLs of all the blogs on the page
This gets all the blog titles and their URLs. Its an easy way to sort ou which blogs to share and which not to share.

Step 3. Split the entries for easy sorting or a cleaner view.

Step 4. Set a new https node with all the blog URLs that we got from the previous steps.

Step 5. Extract the contents of the blog

Step 6. Add the medium node and then set the contents that you want to be shared out.

Execute your workflow and you are good to go

Nodes used in this workflow

Popular HTTP Request and Medium workflows

HTML node
HTTP Request node
Item Lists node
Medium node
+2

Posting from Wordpress to Medium

Usage This workflow gets all the posts from your WordPress site and sorts them into a clear format before publishing them to medium. Step 1. Set up the HTTP node and set the URL of the source destination. This will be the URL of the blog you want to use. We shall be using https://mailsafi.com/blog for this. Step 2. Extract the URLs of all the blogs on the page This gets all the blog titles and their URLs. Its an easy way to sort ou which blogs to share and which not to share. Step 3. Split the entries for easy sorting or a cleaner view. Step 4. Set a new https node with all the blog URLs that we got from the previous steps. Step 5. Extract the contents of the blog Step 6. Add the medium node and then set the contents that you want to be shared out. Execute your workflow and you are good to go
HTTP Request node
Webhook node
Medium node

Cross-post your blog posts

This workflow uses Strapi as a CMS and then cross posts new blog posts to Medium and Dev.to.

Build your own HTTP Request and Medium integration

Create custom HTTP Request and Medium workflows by choosing triggers and actions. Nodes come with global operations and settings, as well as app-specific parameters that can be configured. You can also use the HTTP Request node to query data from any app or service with a REST API.

Medium supported actions

Create
Create a post
Get Many
Get many publications
Use case

Save engineering resources

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Use case

Automate lead management

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FAQs

  • Can HTTP Request connect with Medium?

  • Can I use HTTP Request’s API with n8n?

  • Can I use Medium’s API with n8n?

  • Is n8n secure for integrating HTTP Request and Medium?

  • How to get started with HTTP Request and Medium integration in n8n.io?

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Why use n8n to integrate HTTP Request with Medium

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Your data is displayed alongside your settings, making edge cases easy to track down.

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