The Ember Times - Issue No. 117
The Ember Times
Posted on September 28, 2019
π Emberistas! πΉ
Celebrate the release of Ember 3.13 (Octane Preview) π, Adopted Ember Addons welcomes ember-sortable π£, learn about what happened at EmberCamp 2019 πΉπ, read the updates to the Ember Octane Guides π, and check out the latest feature for Ember SVG Jar π!
Celebrate the Release of Ember 3.13 (Octane Preview) π
Ember Octane (3.14) is arriving soon! Today, in 3.13, you can try out all stable features of Octane, including 5 new features:
- Tracked properties (
@tracked
) - Component co-location (part 1)
-
component-class
generator - Build-time detection of edition for addon authors
-
updateComponent
hook for addon authors
In addition, version 3.12 of Ember has now been promoted to LTS (Long Term Support). An LTS version of Ember will receive security updates for 9 release cycles (54 weeks) and bugfixes for 6 cycles (36 weeks).
We encourage you to learn more about the new features and migration path to 3.13 by checking out the official announcement. We'd also appreciate your help with completing Octane documentation and testing 3.14 beta against your apps and addons. π
A newly adopted Ember Addon π£
Adopted Ember Addons has adopted ember-sortable, an addon which provides Sortable UI primitives for Ember. The addon was created by Jamie White (@jgwhite) over four years ago and he has been maintaining it all this time! The time has come however for the addon to get some new love β€ under the Adopted Ember Addons umbrella.
The goal of Adopted Ember Addons is to give Ember addons a place to stay maintained when the original maintainer decides that they would like to pass the mantle. The program guidelines explain how the program works.
Maintaining these addons takes work by real people. The program is always on the lookout for helpful people to contribute and help maintain these addons. Ember wouldn't be where it is today without the amazing addon ecosystem. If you would like to help out in maintaining these addons, please come join us on Discord in #adopted-ember-addons. β€
Accessibility, Compiler Secrets and Modern Ember @ EmberCamp πΉ
Last week, the Ember community went on an extraordinary trip into the metropolitan wilderness of Illinois:
EmberCamp 2019 took place in Chicago on September 16th and was insightful, exciting and entertaining as always!
With twelve, versed speakers, the schedule offered thoughtful insights into:
- What's new in Ember with its first edition, Octane
- How Embroider and Ember will literally build a future together
- Everything you need to know to build accessible JavaScript apps in 2019
- How to level up your app with web workers* and meaningful animations
- Strategies for stable and reliable test suites
- ...and many, many more topics!
One particular highlight of the camping trip was the "May I Ask a Question" live event that both Jen Weber (@jwwweber) and Preston Sego (@nullvoxpopuli) led and hosted, answering burning questions from the community.
A huge thank you to those who made this year's EmberCamp possible: kudos to the organizers Melanie Sumner (@MelSumner), Sean Massa (@EndangeredMassa), Trek Glowacki (@trek), Howie Bollinger (@dbollinger) and all those who volunteered πββοΈ
Missed out on the conference, but still want to catch up before the recordings are out? Be sure to check out Jordan Hawker's (@elwayman02) comprehensive EmberCamp summary, including talk notes and slides for the entire programme.
Can't wait to make it to the camping trip next year? Be sure to let the EmberCamp team know on Twitter or via old-school e-mail!
Updates to the Ember Octane Guides π
Chris Garrett @pzuraq added @action
, on
, and fn
to the Ember Octane edition guide and updated it to match the latest changes to the edition.
Now the Octane Guides have documentation on how to use the new conventional APIs for creating and adding event handlers and actions to your components and templates:
- The
@action
decorator - The
{{on}}
modifier - The
{{fn}}
helper
This documentation change provides much needed information on the benefits and how to get used to using these new APIs.
New Feature: Assets Viewer for Ember SVG Jar π
Ember SVG Jar, an addon that lets you easily add SVG images, now features the Assets Viewer. Think of Assets Viewer as a hub where you can meet all SVG images available in your project. You can search for the image that you need and copy the helper code to render that image in your app.
We encourage you to learn more about Ember SVG Jar today. Please thank Ivan Votti (@ivanvotti) for his work!
Contributors' Corner π
This week we'd like to thank @Gaurav0, @makepanic, @ghislaineguerin, @jenweber, @tomdale, @melmerp, @Turbo87, @rwjblue, @HeroicEric, @zinyando, @dcyriller, @maxwondercorn, @runspired, @nummi and @rwwagner90 for their contributions to Ember and related repositories! π
Got a Question? Ask Readers' Questions! π€
Wondering about something related to Ember, Ember Data, Glimmer, or addons in the Ember ecosystem, but don't know where to ask? Readersβ Questions are just for you!
Submit your own short and sweet question under bit.ly/ask-ember-core. And donβt worry, there are no silly questions, we appreciate them all - promise! π€
#embertimes π°
Want to write for the Ember Times? Have a suggestion for next week's issue? Join us at #support-ember-times on the Ember Community Discord or ping us @embertimes on Twitter.
Keep on top of what's been going on in Emberland this week by subscribing to our e-mail newsletter! You can also find our posts on the Ember blog.
That's another wrap! β¨
Be kind,
Chris Ng, Jessica Jordan, Isaac Lee, Alon Bukai, Amy Lam and the Learning Team
Posted on September 28, 2019
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