File editing on GitHub Mobile keeps leveling up
Commit an update to a pull request, or start a new branch to squash a bug at any time, wherever you are using the GitHub Mobile apps.
The latest news and updates around GitHub’s suite of tools and features. From new capabilities and products that streamline software development to powerful integrations that boost collaboration, this category provides comprehensive coverage of the advancements shaping the future of software development on GitHub.
Commit an update to a pull request, or start a new branch to squash a bug at any time, wherever you are using the GitHub Mobile apps.
GitHub Desktop helps you feel confident in your Git and GitHub workflows.
We’re excited to announce the general availability of GitHub Actions Importer. GitHub Actions Importer helps you plan, forecast, and automate migrations from Azure DevOps, CircleCI, GitLab, Jenkins, and Travis CI…
Speed up your GitHub Actions jobs on macOS with all new, faster GitHub-hosted macOS runners for x64.
Secret scanning alerts are now generally available for all public repositories. Admins can now turn on the alert experience with one click.
Learn about CodeQL’s improved user experience and enhancements that let you scan new languages, detect new types of CWEs, and perform deeper analyses of your applications.
GitHub Copilot is the world’s first at-scale AI developer tool and we’re now offering it to every developer, team, organization, and enterprise.
Update to the latest version of Desktop and previous version of Atom before February 2.
How to tap into the power of GitHub Actions from anywhere with GitHub Mobile!
Default settings will allow developers with write and maintain access to see and resolve Dependabot alerts.
Category Forms allow maintainers to create templates for their GitHub Discussions, which means that users can start new discussions with all the necessary information already included.
With just one click, admins in GitHub Advanced Security organizations can protect their custom patterns on push.
GitHub will require all users who contribute code on GitHub.com to enable one or more forms of two-factor authentication (2FA) by the end of 2023. Learn more about our approach, when we’ll begin our rollout, and what you can expect as we begin requiring 2FA.
GitHub Copilot for Business is officially here with simple license management, organization-wide policy controls, and industry-leading privacy—all for $19 USD per user per month.
Build what’s next on GitHub, the place for anyone from anywhere to build anything.
Get tickets to the 10th anniversary of our global developer event on AI, DevEx, and security.