6ba2fdb2fe
Until now, Rails only droped compatibility with older rubies on new majors, but I propose to change this policy because it causes us to either keep compatibility with long EOLed rubies or to bump the Rails major more often, and to drop multiple Ruby versions at once when we bump the major. In my opinion it's a bad alignments of incentives. And we'd be much better to just drop support in new minors whenever they go EOL (so 3 years). Also Ruby being an upstream dependency, it's not even a semver violation AFAICT. Since Rails 7.2 isn't planned before a few months, we can already drop Ruby 3.0 as it will be EOL in March. |
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app | ||
bin | ||
db/migrate | ||
lib | ||
test | ||
.gitignore | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
MIT-LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
Rakefile | ||
actiontext.gemspec | ||
package.json | ||
rollup.config.js |
README.md
Action Text
Action Text brings rich text content and editing to \Rails. It includes the Trix editor that handles everything from formatting to links to quotes to lists to embedded images and galleries. The rich text content generated by the Trix editor is saved in its own RichText model that's associated with any existing Active Record model in the application. Any embedded images (or other attachments) are automatically stored using Active Storage and associated with the included RichText model.
You can read more about Action Text in the Action Text Overview guide.
Development
The JavaScript for Action Text is distributed both as a npm module under @rails/actiontext and via the asset pipeline as actiontext.js (and we mirror Trix as trix.js). To ensure that the latter remains in sync, you must run yarn build
and checkin the artifacts whenever the JavaScript source or the Trix dependency is bumped. CSS changes must be brought over manually to app/assets/stylesheets/trix.css
License
Action Text is released under the MIT License.