Let's take your attempts one at a time:
+N=N-N=N-N
First, your charges are wrong. Nitrogen with only two bonds is formally -1, not +1. (Do your formal charge calculation when in doubt, but you should learn to recognize it quickly. Three-bonded nitrogen is neutral, two-bonded nitrogen is -1 and four-bonded nitrogen is +1. Easy way to remember is that dinitrogen, a neutral compound, is triple bonded and the cations in ammonium salts are NH4+.) The singly bonded nitrogen on the right hand side would formally be -2, not 0 (so the overall charge of this molecule would be -1, not +1 as required by the problem), which brings me to the second problem: in some cases you'll see a nitrogen with a -1 formal charge (doubly bonded) but almost never -2 (singly bonded). So this is what I meant by: learn the conventional bonding patterns of common elements. Nitrogen can commonly accommodate 2, 3 or 4 total bonds. Your resonance structures should not include nitrogens that are bonded only once or five times, shouldn't include oxygens that are bonded four times and carbons pretty much should always be bonded 4 times (other versions exist but they're for the most part unstable so you shouldn't worry about them).
N-N=N+=N-N
Nitrogens on the ends would each be formally -2 charge (for an overall molecular charge of -3) and as pointed out above, nitrogen shouldn't be bonded only once.
N=N-N+-N=N
Nitrogens on the ends would each be formally -1 charge and the nitrogen you've identified as having +1 charge also has a -1 charge (for an overall molecular charge of -3).
Haha sorry, it was into the morning's early hours and I forgot for a second that N cannot disobey the octet rule! My plan with giving N just 1 bond was that this involves its 5th electron, leaving 2 lone pairs, but then the total is only 6 :p
Should I always assume that if N has 4 bonds it requires a positive formal charge, if it has 3 it is neutral, if it has 2 it has a negative formal charge? (And so forth, i.e. 5 bonds -> +2, 1 bond -> -2 formal charges). I know it is always the case with O that 2 bonds mean O is neutral, 3 mean it is positive and 1 means it is negative. (Any exceptions to this? O's pretty important) If C has 5 it will be -1, if it has 4 it will be neutral, if it has 3 it will be +1, 2 will be -2, etc. So I suppose, is there are systematic way to work this out, which extends maybe to the transition metals? I am familiar with most of the main elements but it would make it far easier to find the likely isomers if I understood what formal charge each atom will take up given a certain number of bonds. Prior to this discussion I think the only one I was crystal clear on was oxygen (as it comes up so often in examples).