Keep your project lists tidy by deleting experimental or out-of-date projects that are no longer relevant to you and your team. While you've been able to close projects, we heard you loud and clear that it wasn't enough and we're now introducing the ability to fully delete a project. These are currently in preview and will be fully shipped in the upcoming week. We have added a new state_reason attribute to our REST API, GraphQL API and webhooks.
![markdown math markdown math](https://miro.medium.com/max/2000/0*DF9jUrEL9jjbtncC.gif)
When filtering, adding a reason will allow you to filter down to the specific set you need with either reason:complete or reason:"not planned".When closing, you can opt to close as complete (default option) or not-planned.Issue closed reasons help you communicate the why when closing an issue:
![markdown math markdown math](https://i.pinimg.com/474x/48/16/ea/4816ea4d906e517498f23070cd067016.jpg)
We announced a preview of issue closed reasons in March and today, we're releasing them to everyone. Today's Changelog brings you the release of issue closed reasons, project deletion, and availability of the new side-panel. Going forward, expressions should be written directly in Markdown using LaTeX syntax as described above.įor more information about authoring content with advanced formatting, see Working with advanced formatting in the GitHub documentation. Images generated this way will remain viewable, but this technique will no longer work. Some users have previously used a workaround to generate images of mathematical expressions through API requests. For more information, see the MathJax documentation and the MathJax Accessibility Extensions documentation. MathJax supports a wide range of LaTeX macros and a number of useful accessibility extensions. GitHub's math rendering capability uses MathJax an open source, JavaScript-based display engine. To add math as a multiline block displayed separately from surrounding text, start a new line and delimit the expression with two dollar symbols $$. You can now use LaTeX style syntax to render math expressions within Markdown inline (using $ delimiters) or in blocks (using $$ delimiters).