Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @wordpress/element
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @wordpress/element
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @wordpress/element
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @wordpress/element
The Block Editor project for WordPress and beyond. Plugin is available from the official repository.
npm install @wordpress/element
Module System
Min. Node Version
Typescript Support
Node Version
NPM Version
10,551 Stars
34,422 Commits
4,217 Forks
348 Watching
2,899 Branches
1,291 Contributors
Updated on 28 Nov 2024
JavaScript (62.38%)
TypeScript (16.87%)
PHP (11.1%)
HTML (3.72%)
SCSS (3.6%)
Java (1%)
Swift (0.6%)
Kotlin (0.2%)
Mustache (0.13%)
Shell (0.11%)
CSS (0.09%)
MDX (0.09%)
Objective-C (0.04%)
PEG.js (0.04%)
Ruby (0.03%)
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
-4.8%
40,471
Compared to previous day
Last week
1.5%
239,040
Compared to previous week
Last month
14.8%
963,351
Compared to previous month
Last year
36.7%
9,609,460
Compared to previous year
Welcome to the development hub for the WordPress Gutenberg project!
"Gutenberg" is a codename for a whole new paradigm in WordPress site building and publishing, that aims to revolutionize the entire publishing experience as much as Gutenberg did the printed word. Right now, the project is in the second phase of a four-phase process that will touch every piece of WordPress -- Editing, Customization, Collaboration (which includes Real-time collaboration, Asynchronous collaboration, Publishing flows, Post revisions interface, Admin design, Library), and Multilingual -- and is focused on a new editing experience, the block editor.
The block editor introduces a modular approach to pages and posts: each piece of content in the editor, from a paragraph to an image gallery to a headline, is its own block. And just like physical blocks, WordPress blocks can be added, arranged, and rearranged, allowing WordPress users to create media-rich pages in a visually intuitive way -- and without work-arounds like shortcodes or custom HTML.
The block editor first became available in December 2018, and we're still hard at work refining the experience, creating more and better blocks, and laying the groundwork for the next three phases of work. The Gutenberg plugin gives you the latest version of the block editor, so you can join us in testing bleeding-edge features, start playing with blocks, and maybe get inspired to build your own.
Check out the Keeping up with Gutenberg Index
Get hands on: check out the block editor live demo to play with a test instance of the editor.
Download: To use the latest release of the Gutenberg plugin on your WordPress site: install from the plugins page in wp-admin, or download from the WordPress.org plugins repository.
User Documentation: See the WordPress Editor documentation for detailed docs on using the editor as an author creating posts and pages.
User Support: If you have run into an issue, you should check the Support Forums first. The forums are a great place to get help. If you have a bug to report, please submit it to the Gutenberg repository. Please search prior to creating a new bug to confirm it's not a duplicate.
Extending and customizing is at the heart of the WordPress platform, this is no different for the Gutenberg project. The editor and future products can be extended by third-party developers using plugins.
Review the Quick Start Guide for the fastest way to get started extending the block editor. See the Block Editor Handbook for extensive tutorials, documentation, and API references. Also, check the WordPress Developer Blog for great articles about block development, among other topics.
Gutenberg is an open-source project and welcomes all contributors from code to design, and from documentation to triage. The project is built by many contributors and volunteers, and we'd love your help building it.
See the Contributors Handbook for all the details on how you can contribute.
To get up and running quickly with code contribution see Getting Started With Code Contribution. Also check out the other resources available on the Code Contributions page.
In whichever way you wish to contribute please be sure to read the Contributing Guidelines first.
As with all WordPress projects, we want to ensure a welcoming environment for everyone. With that in mind, all contributors are expected to follow our Code of Conduct.
You can join us in the #core-editor
channel in Slack, see the WordPress Slack page for signup information; it is free to join.
WordPress is free software, and is released under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 or (at your option) any later version. See LICENSE.md for complete license.
No vulnerabilities found.
Reason
30 commit(s) and 20 issue activity found in the last 90 days -- score normalized to 10
Reason
all changesets reviewed
Reason
no dangerous workflow patterns detected
Reason
packaging workflow detected
Details
Reason
no binaries found in the repo
Reason
security policy file detected
Details
Reason
license file detected
Details
Reason
dependency not pinned by hash detected -- score normalized to 8
Details
Reason
no effort to earn an OpenSSF best practices badge detected
Reason
detected GitHub workflow tokens with excessive permissions
Details
Reason
Project has not signed or included provenance with any releases.
Details
Reason
SAST tool is not run on all commits -- score normalized to 0
Details
Reason
project is not fuzzed
Details
Reason
29 existing vulnerabilities detected
Details
Score
Last Scanned on 2024-11-25
The Open Source Security Foundation is a cross-industry collaboration to improve the security of open source software (OSS). The Scorecard provides security health metrics for open source projects.
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