We are happy to announce Docusaurus 2.2.
The upgrade should be easy: as explained in our release process documentation, minor versions respect Semantic Versioning.
We are happy to announce Docusaurus 2.2.
The upgrade should be easy: as explained in our release process documentation, minor versions respect Semantic Versioning.
We are happy to announce Docusaurus 2.1, our very first minor version release.
The upgrade should be easy: as explained in our release process documentation, minor versions respect Semantic Versioning.
Today we are extremely happy to finally announce Docusaurus 2.0! 🥳️
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.
After 4 years of work, 75 alphas and 22 betas, the next generation of Docusaurus is ready for prime time. From now on, we now plan to respect Semantic Versioning and will release major versions more frequently.
After a lengthy alpha stage in order to ensure feature parity and quality, we are excited to officially release the first Docusaurus 2 beta.
With the announcement of this beta, the team is even more confident that Docusaurus 2 is ready for mainstream adoption!
Today, we officially release Docusaurus 2 i18n (internationalization), as part of 2.0.0-alpha.71.
Docusaurus 2 has now reached full feature parity with Docusaurus 1. 🎉 And soon, after a few additional infrastructure updates and a bit more testing, the first Docusaurus 2 beta will be released.
We went the extra mile, and the new i18n support is even better than in Docusaurus 1.
In this post, we will present you the translation workflow, explain some design decisions and showcase early adopter sites that just went live: Jest, Redwood, and Datagit.
We also dogfood the i18n support on the Docusaurus 2 site itself, and this post is already available in English and French!