05-11-2015, 10:57 PM
Did you develop this in Internet Explorer?
My version of a plugin repository
|
05-11-2015, 10:57 PM
Did you develop this in Internet Explorer?
(05-11-2015, 10:46 PM)tigerw Wrote: That's very strange. Could you screenshot? Right here ^^: http://puu.sh/hJlwB/9a1887eed2.png
Tiger, just grab a standards compliant browser and look at you're site. The slideshow is broken on first render.
Also why is the separating line by the logo animated? Its just distracting
05-11-2015, 11:21 PM
Thanks given by: NiLSPACE
What if our plugin repo was tightly integrated with github?
We wouldn't have to worry about storage, account management and the repo would be integrated. So, basically a catalog of github repos with rating, reporting, comments and a nice api for autoupdate plugin to fetch updates from. Thanks given by: tonibm19 , sphinxc0re
05-12-2015, 02:29 AM
You could integrate with GitHub, but it would be much more complicated to develop and use for new users not used to working with GitHub.
05-12-2015, 02:49 AM
Using github isn't THAT hard, and we want to promote good habits.
05-12-2015, 04:53 AM
It's not difficult to use, in fact it's easier than the alternatives.
But most plugin devs don't start out using git, and it can be a substantial barrier to entry, and would discourage a lot of plugins to be made.
05-12-2015, 05:03 AM
They could use web interface, I started with it, and then moved to Github windows app, which is easy too.
I think, if using GitHub is too difficult for you, then writing a good plugin is basically impossibly difficult for you
![]() Is the repository hosting the plugin downloads, or just storing links? If we forced GitHub, we could just store links, even for historical versions. Any chance of an API that a plugin may use to perform a version check? Such as "Give me the latest version numbers for plugins X, Y and Z". Preferably in some simple-to-parse format (not JSON - we don't have a parser API in MCS yet) |
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »
|