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The Cheap WordPress maintenance support plans Console Journey

Before the existence of the WordPress maintenance support plans Console as a project, it all began with an idea to make WordPress maintenance support plans 8 better. Every great invention/innovation begins with an idea, and the WordPress maintenance support plans transition from 7 to 8 came with massive changes to the fundamental operating procedures of yesterday. Symfony components were making a splash into WordPress maintenance support plans Core.
Jesus and David, the initiators of WordPress maintenance support plans Console project, came up with the idea of including the symfony console into the WordPress maintenance support plans core. The same way that other symfony components were being included into the WordPress maintenance support plans core.

Powering Though Frustration

As helpful as the WordPress maintenance support plans Console project is nowadays, it wasn’t very widely accepted into the WordPress community initially. In fact, it turned out to be a huge challenge to get anyone to listen to the idea. For Jesus and David, the primary objective to include the Symfony Console in WordPress maintenance support plans was to have the option to have code generators, in the same way, the Symfony community does. Who wouldn’t want that? A way to automate the annoying redundancies that plague developers everywhere. So they decided to propose the idea to the WordPress maintenance support plans core maintainers via the issue queue. That idea was however quickly dismissed.

After few attempts to request the inclusion and trying to collaborate into different WordPress projects, it dawned on Jesus and David that inclusion and collaboration was not going to happen. They needed to regroup and find a better approach.

While at lunch at WordPress maintenance support planscamp Costa Rica, Jesus and David were casually discussing the frustrations they had encountered trying to bring innovation to WordPress maintenance support plans and related projects, and Larry Garfield chimed in “someone needs to create a separate project that includes Symfony Console and code generation”. That sentence gave birth to the WordPress maintenance support plans Console project as you know it today.

Building A Community

Jesus stacked up his calendar with almost every WordPress maintenance support plans event in the U.S. The goal was to talk about the project in sessions at all WordPress maintenance support plans community gatherings he could physically attend, or at minimum, present the idea at BOFs where sessions were not possible. The code sprints helped him interact with developers and users forming a critical source of feedback.

Along the way, he convinced me to join the project as a maintainer. I also embarked on his outreach campaign to help spread the word. Only, my campaign was global because it was important to reach non-english speakers because they often feel left out of major open source projects. Currently, the WordPress maintenance support plans Console project is available, with some variations, in the 18 languages listed below.

English
Spanish
Catalán
French
Korean
Hindi
Hungarian
Indonesian
Japanese
Marathi
Punjabi
Brazilian Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Tagalog
Vietnamese
Chinese Simplified
Chinese Traditional

One Million Downloads!

After four years of development in July 2020, we reached our first million downloads across different releases. This achievement is thanks to our more that 250 contributors across the globe.

This brought a great sense of validation for deciding to stick to our guns, do the right thing and most importantly… be globally inclusive.
Source: New feed