Open Source Symfony Support is provided by the community via StackOverflow and Slack. Both have served us well for some years, but they lack some features that are increasingly important for us. StackOverflow is nice for async support and its discussions stay forever and can be found via Google, but it lacks advanced formatting tools, better moderation and GitHub integration (to ping users, mention issues, etc.) Slack is nice for sync support, where you need a quick and live reply to your questions. Sadly it suffers from the same problems as StackOverflow and some of its own problems. The free version of Slack used by Symfony has a 10,000 message history limit and its messages can't be found via Google. That's why we're enabling GitHub Discussions for Symfony as a new way for the community to provide free Symfony Support. In our opinion, the main advantages of GitHub Discussions over StackOverflow/Slack are: There's no history message limit and all discussions are easily found via Google; Discussions can use all the great formatting tools provided by GitHub, including the seamless picture uploading; The entire Symfony community is on GitHub, so discussions can leverage the features to ping users and mention issues and pull requests; Although discussions won't be as sync as Slack chat, the size of the Symfony community could ensure fast replies to most discussions; Instead of closing some issues because they are support questions, we can now convert those into discussions, improving the newcomers experience; We'll have more moderation tools to ensure that GitHub Discussions is a great and safe place for everyone. We're looking for moderators to help us monitor discussions and contribute to them. Visit https://github.com/symfony/symfony/discussions and find discussions that need answers or people looking for help. We're delighted to try GitHub Discussions. However, for now this is just an experiment. We'll adjust things as needed and we could even remove GitHub Discussions in the future if expectations aren't met.
Sponsor the Symfony project.
Login to add comment
Other posts in this group
This blog post highlights the key accomplishments of the Symfony project in 2024. We are grateful for your continuous support, which enabled the Symfony project to achieve a remarkable year.
Releases
This week, Symfony 6.4.17, 7.1.10 and 7.2.2 maintenance versions were released. In addition, we published more information about the upcoming SymfonyOnline January 2025 conference.
Symfony developmen
Get ready for the exciting SymfonyOnline January 2025, kicking off shortly on January 16-17! There’s still time to register and join the international online Symfony conference—along with pre-
Symfony 6.4.17 has just been released. Here is the list of the most important changes since 6.4.16:
bug #59304 [PropertyInfo] Remove @internal from PropertyReadInfo and PropertyWriteInfo (Dario G
Symfony 7.1.10 has just been released. Here is the list of the most important changes since 7.1.9:
bug #59304 [PropertyInfo] Remove @internal from PropertyReadInfo and PropertyWriteInfo (Dario Gu
Symfony 7.2.2 has just been released. Here is the list of the most important changes since 7.2.1:
bug #59304 [PropertyInfo] Remove @internal from PropertyReadInfo and PropertyWriteInfo (Dario Gua
This week, we launched the new Twig playground, a tool that lets you test and experiment with Twig features in a safe, sandboxed environment. While Symfony development activity was lighter than usual