Gathering detailed insights and metrics for i18n-calypso-cli
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for i18n-calypso-cli
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for i18n-calypso-cli
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for i18n-calypso-cli
npm install i18n-calypso-cli
WP-Desktop 6.15.0 [updater redirect to wp-desktop repository]
Published on 02 Jun 2021
WP-Desktop 6.15.0-beta1
Published on 05 May 2021
WP-Desktop 6.14.0
Published on 03 May 2021
WP-Desktop 6.14.0-beta1
Published on 19 Apr 2021
WP-Desktop 6.13.0
Published on 06 Apr 2021
WP-Desktop 6.13.0-beta1
Published on 22 Mar 2021
Module System
Min. Node Version
Typescript Support
Node Version
NPM Version
12,434 Stars
71,481 Commits
1,988 Forks
486 Watching
3,167 Branches
912 Contributors
Updated on 28 Nov 2024
TypeScript (46.97%)
JavaScript (42.94%)
SCSS (9.73%)
PHP (0.14%)
HTML (0.12%)
Shell (0.04%)
CSS (0.02%)
Dockerfile (0.01%)
Makefile (0.01%)
Handlebars (0.01%)
Ruby (0.01%)
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
0%
1
Compared to previous day
Last week
300%
12
Compared to previous week
Last month
18.5%
32
Compared to previous month
Last year
-15.4%
1,423
Compared to previous year
4
Calypso is the new WordPress.com front-end – a beautiful redesign of the WordPress dashboard using a single-page web application, powered by the WordPress.com REST API. Calypso is built for reading, writing, and managing all of your WordPress sites in one place.
It’s built with JavaScript – a very light node plus express server, React.js, Redux, wpcom.js, and many other wonderful libraries on the front-end.
You can read more about Calypso at developer.wordpress.com/calypso.
You can try out the user-side of Calypso on WordPress.com (a lot of the logged-in area is Calypso; if in doubt, view source), you can poke around the code here on GitHub, or you can install it and run it locally. The latter is the most fun.
git
, node
, and yarn
installed.127.0.0.1 calypso.localhost
to your local hosts
file.yarn
and then yarn start
from the root directory of the repository.calypso.localhost:3000
in your browser.Need more detailed installation instructions? We have them.
If Calypso sparks your interest, don’t hesitate to send a pull request, send a suggestion, file a bug, or just ask a question. We promise we’ll be nice. Just don’t forget to check out our CONTRIBUTING doc – it includes a few technical details that will make the process a lot smoother.
Calypso welcomes – and indeed has been built by – contributors from all walks of life, with different backgrounds, and with a wide range of experience. We're committed to doing our part to make both Calypso and the wider WordPress community welcoming to everyone.
You can contribute in many ways. You can help reporting, testing, and detailing bugs, and also test new features we release in our "beta" program for testing on Horizon.
To clarify these expectations, Calypso has adopted the code of conduct defined by the Contributor Covenant. It can be read in full here.
Need to report a security vulnerability? Go to https://automattic.com/security/ or directly to our security bug bounty site https://hackerone.com/automattic.
Our security policy can be read in full here.
We support the latest two versions of all major browsers. (see Browse Happy for current latest versions).
If you have any problems running Calypso, please see the most common issues.
Calypso is licensed under GNU General Public License v2 (or later).
No vulnerabilities found.
Reason
30 commit(s) and 9 issue activity found in the last 90 days -- score normalized to 10
Reason
no dangerous workflow patterns detected
Reason
security policy file detected
Details
Reason
license file detected
Details
Reason
no binaries found in the repo
Reason
Found 20/30 approved changesets -- score normalized to 6
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
dependency not pinned by hash detected -- score normalized to 0
Details
Reason
53 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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