- apply general fixes to existing markdown documentation
- various cases of rst syntax still used
- update some links to be the new format
- clean up line breaks (prettier)
* update github bug template to have status:Unconfirmed
- by default, ensure that all new bugs are raised with the label status:Unconfirmed
- for the bug template where 'hints' exist - use HTML comments to hide these
* docs - update issue tracking
- convert from RST to markdown
- add details about when to use Github discussions instead of an issue
- add details about bugs will be raised with the status:Unconfirmed
- add link to PR triage guide
- add links to release schedule & roadmap
- put less emphasis on milestones for new issue creation
This:
- updates the pre-commit configuration and setup.py testing dependencies
- updates isort/flake8 configuration for black
- adds black linting to Makefile and CircleCI configuration
- updates editorconfig with the new line length (88) for py files
- updates python guidelines in docs
- Install Prettier
- Add Prettier configuration
- Add git-blame-ignore-revs
- Clean up .editorconfig indent_style definition
- Clean up .editorconfig space definitions
- Add documentation for Prettier
- Add missing Prettier run-scripts
- Disable Prettier formatting in CI for now
- Remove gulp code and docs
- Add base CSS & SCSS processing in Webpack
- Make sure Sass files use paths that can be resolved by Webpack
- Use faster source map generation
- Clean up build scripts
- Make sure Storybook can process Sass
- Switch away from web fonts (more work needed)
Small but important changes:
- We should always be testing in Windows, even if MS Edge is now available on macOS as well.
- We should make a better effort to support older Safari releases, as Safari is tied to OS updates, and device management isn’t always keeping up with releases
Security researchers frequently report CSV formula injection as a security vulnerability in Wagtail, but that's the responsibility of the software consuming the CSV, not creating it. Hopefully this explanation will stop them from doing that (or at least give us a ready-made response to point at when they do).