We are happy to announce Docusaurus 3.1.
The upgrade should be easy: as explained in our release process documentation, minor versions respect Semantic Versioning.
We are happy to announce Docusaurus 3.1.
The upgrade should be easy: as explained in our release process documentation, minor versions respect Semantic Versioning.
Today, we are happy to announce Docusaurus 3.0! 🥳
At Meta Open Source, we believe Docusaurus will help you build the best documentation websites with minimal effort, letting you focus on what really matters: writing the content.
This is a new major version of Docusaurus, coming with new exciting features and upgraded dependencies.
In line with the Semantic Versioning principles, this release includes breaking changes we documented thoroughly in the v3 upgrade guide. Breaking changes can be bothersome, but they are necessary to set the ground for a new wave of Docusaurus features we plan to implement.
Frontend developers often need to upgrade npm dependencies, but those upgrades can feel scary and lead to subtle UI side effects not caught by your regular test suite.
Upgrading Docusaurus is a good example: without reviewing all the pages one by one, it's hard to be sure there's no visual regression. Docusaurus v3 is around the corner (currently in beta), and we would like to help you do this upgrade with confidence.
This article introduces a visual regression testing workflow based on GitHub Actions, Playwright, and Argos. It is not directly coupled to Docusaurus or React, and can be adapted to work with other frontend applications and frameworks.
We are happy to announce Docusaurus 2.4.
The upgrade should be easy: as explained in our release process documentation, minor versions respect Semantic Versioning.
We are happy to announce Docusaurus 2.3.
The upgrade should be easy: as explained in our release process documentation, minor versions respect Semantic Versioning.