The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20220110173033/https://github.com/topics/action
Skip to content
#

action

actions logo

GitHub Actions gives you the flexibility to build an automated software development lifecycle workflow. You can write individual tasks, called actions, and combine them to create a custom workflow. Workflows are custom automated processes that you can set up in your repository to build, test, package, release, or deploy any code project on GitHub.

“With GitHub Actions you can build end-to-end continuous integration (CI) and continuous deployment (CD) capabilities directly in your repository. GitHub Actions powers GitHub's built-in continuous integration service. For more information, see "About continuous integration."

Featured Actions

Getting Started

Community & Support

Taking Action With GitHub Actions

Here are 1,058 public repositories matching this topic...

github-pages-deploy-action
deox
sanbornhilland
sanbornhilland commented Jun 10, 2021

Are you open to adding a Payload utility type? I think the following would be fairly useful:

const action = createActionCreator(
	'FOO',
	resolve => (foo: string) => resolve({ foo }),
)

// Get the payload type of this action
const FooPayload = Payload<typeof action>

Essentially I think you can do something like this but it would be better to make it generic.

ty
mjpieters
mjpieters commented Oct 12, 2020

I use version strings that allow for updates to minor versions, such as:

importlib_metadata = { version = "^1.3.0", python = "< 3.8" }

The version restriction is ^1.3.0, a caret version, which allows 1.x major release provided it is equal to 1.3.0 or newer. A related syntax is a ~ tilde version restriction, which pins the minor version , such that ~1.3.0 would accept 1.3.8

Created by GitHub

Released October 16, 2018

Organization
actions
Website
github.com/features/actions

Related Topics

ci docker