What’s new from GitHub Changelog? October 2021 recap
A public beta of the new GitHub Issues, a “security manager” role for organizations, a command palette beta, and lots more.
A public beta of the new GitHub Issues, a “security manager” role for organizations, a command palette beta, and lots more.
The Exiv2 team tightened our security by enabling GitHub’s code scanning feature and adding custom queries tailored to the Exiv2 code base.
Right-to-left languages are now supported natively in Markdown files, issues, pull requests, discussions, and comments. Do you think they could be even better? Let us know how we can improve…
What an incredible month it’s been for GitHub and our communities. Whilst we’ve been busy with GitHub Universe, our communities have been busy coding. It’s been a successful year for…
You can now quickly create a Markdown link in all Markdown-enabled fields, like issue comments and pull request descriptions, by pasting a URL on text that you have previously selected.…
Here are a few ways our teams use GitHub Discussions internally to build community, simplify workflows, and get key insights into our work.
The new sparse index feature makes it feel like you are working in a small repository when working in a focused portion of a monorepo.
When you’re fixing a bug, especially a security vulnerability, you should add a regression test, fix the bug, and find & fix variants.
Tips on how to get started using GitHub Actions and resources to learn more about making it work for you.
This blog post is the first in a series about hardening the security of the Exiv2 project. My goal is to share tips that will help you harden the security of your own project.
As an administrator of an organization, you can now moderate disruptive behavior in your community on the go. Tap Block from organization from a comment menu on an issue, pull…
A command palette beta is now available for all users across github.com. Quickly navigate to your organizations and repositories, and use modes to find and jump-to pull requests, issues, projects,…
Since last year’s GitHub Universe, we’ve shipped more than 20,000 improvements to GitHub for developers, open source communities, and enterprise teams. Here’s a comprehensive overview of what we’re announcing at Universe this week.
GitHub Actions can automate several common security and compliance tasks, even if your CI/CD pipeline is managed by another tool.
GitHub is where developers come to learn and celebrate what’s new in open source, and where maintainers share, collaborate and celebrate their community’s work. Starting today, two improvements to the…
Catch up on 44 ships, including a colorblind-accessible theme, a public README.md for organizations, and customization of code review settings.
You can now choose to use a fixed-width font in Markdown-enabled fields, like issue comments and pull request descriptions. Currently these fields use a variable-width font, which can make it…
Giving back to open source projects is a great way to practice skills you don’t get to use in your day job. Check out ways to get involved!
In March we made a change in GitHub Actions that forced workflows triggered by Dependabot to run with a read-only token. This change was made to protect your repositories from…
Dependency review is now generally available for all public repositories and for private repositories with GitHub Advanced Security enabled. Dependency review helps you understand dependency changes and the security impact…
GitHub is where developers come to learn and celebrate what’s new in open source, and where maintainers share, collaborate and celebrate their community’s work. Starting today, available in public beta,…
Build what’s next on GitHub, the place for anyone from anywhere to build anything.
Last chance: Save $700 on your IRL pass to Universe and join us on Oct. 28-29 in San Francisco.