* Add new product to products.yml * Move directory to its new location and rename it * Update new index page * Remove old category from GitHub product index * Add collaboration category * Add membership category * Add roles category * Add teams category * Add team discussion category * Add repo access category * Add project board access category * Add app management category * Add org settings category * Add improved org perms category * Add category for OAuth app restrictions * Add org security category * Add SAML category * Add SAML access category * Add git access category * Add redirects and update links for collaboration category * Add redirects and update links to team discussions content * Add redirects and update links to SAML access category * Update links to org security category and add redirects * Add redirects for app managers content * Add redirects for project board category * Add redirects and update links for the repo access category * Add redirects for git access category * Add redirects and update links for membership category * Add redirects and update links for org settings category * Fix links * Add redirects and update links to org access category * Add redirects and upate links to SSO category * Add redirects to improved org perms category * Add redirects and update links to teams category * Add redirects and update links to oauth apps category * Fix links * Fix links * Fix links
Reusables
Reusables are long strings of reusable text.
Reusables are longer strings like paragraphs or procedural lists that can be referenced in multiple content files. Using Markdown (instead of YAML) makes it possible for our localization pipeline to split the strings into smaller translatable segments, leading to fewer translation errors and less churn when the source English content changes.
Each reusable lives in its own Markdown file.
The path and filename of each Markdown file determines what its path will be in the data object.
For example, a file named /data/reusables/foo/bar.md will be accessible as {% data reusables.foo.bar %} in pages.
Reusable files are divided generally into directories by task. For example, if you're creating a reusable string for articles about GitHub notifications, you'd add it in the directory data/reusables/notifications/ in a file named data/reusables/notifications/your-reusable-name.md. The content reference you'd add to the source would look like {% data reusables.notifications.your-reusable-name %}.