Editors can now specify the language in which the text on a web page is written.
Editors can now specify the language in which the text on a web page is written.

Whether a visitor uses your site search, or an editor uses the search sidebar, Scrivito now takes the language of the documents into account. As a result, language-specific common words (stop words) are ignored, preventing unrelated hits from showing up. Also, stemming is now applied based on the language of the pages, meaning that, for example, singular and plural forms are treated equally, increasing the quality of the search results.
The JavaScript API now also includes an according language() method as well as the _language attribute.

Are you managing multiple websites with Scrivito?
Your sites are now accessible via a dedicated sidebar and no longer via the hierarchy. This helps you keep track of your sites and always have the most recently used ones at your fingertips.

Adding a subpage using the main menu or the submenu in the hierarchy sidebar usually first opens the dialog for selecting the page type. Now, if, due to page type restrictions, only a singe type is available, the dialog is not opened anymore but, for your convenience, the menu item lets you add such a page directly.

In previous versions, the editing configuration of an object or a widget class allowed you to customize the title their instances should have in the Content Browser and in properties views. For this, the titleForContent callback can be provided.
Sometimes, for example with homepages, a label meaningful to editors cannot be derived from the visible content alone. For handling such cases, Scrivito introduces a new attribute convention: contentTitle.
As a default, i.e. if no callback has been provided, titleForContent now first looks for a contentTitle, and then, if it’s empty, for a title string attribute. This makes it possible to provide a custom title for editors (contentTitle) as well as the regular title to be displayed to visitors (title).

To better support customizing Scrivito’s editing interface, the SDK now includes an API for retrieving the ID and the title of the current working copy, Scrivito.currentWorkspace().

A distinctive icon for new and changed images Editors mainly have to deal with two types of content objects: pages and images. To make it easier to spot such objects for reviewing them, a dedicated icon for images is now displayed in the “Changes” sidebar and dialog. Thank you for using Scrivito!...

Introducing layout components, optionally with editable content You can now implement page-type-specific layout components and optionally have them render attributes for editor-defined content. If such layouts are present for a page that is part of the page hierarchy, the layout components of the...

Added support for Ruby on Rails 7.0 The Scrivito for Rails SDK now supports Ruby on Rails 7.0. It requires Ruby 2.7 or later. Earlier Rails versions are no longer supported by Scrivito. Note that during the upgrade you will need to migrate from Rails 5.2 (with Scrivito 1.17.0 ) directly to Rails...

Reducing the payload for your website visitors You’ve probably already noticed that Scrivito’s editing interface is highly configurable through editing configurations that allow the developer to specify, for example, which page properties the editors should be able to adjust. Since website...

Duplicating parent pages For the convenience of editors, pages with subpages, i.e. page hierarchies as a whole, can now be duplicated, obviating the need to copy and then paste the pages individually. Email address as a tooltip when hovering over a user’s name For identifying users better...

Bugfixes obj.copy() now works again In previous Scrivito JS SDK versions, the obj.copy() instance method did not always work as designed. Now it does. Please accept our apologies for any inconvenience caused by this issue.

More versatile “Changes” sidebar Like on the “Hierarchy” sidebar, the pages listed on the “Changes” panel now also feature a menu command for opening their respective properties, meaning that you no longer need to navigate to a page just to open its properties. Furthermore, the items on the...

Improved website performance through lazy image loading Native lazy-loading is a modern web technology that has been implemented by all major browser vendors in the recent years. It defers loading images until they are scrolled into view and thus reduces the bandwidth needed for a page to be...

Introducing TypeScript definitions Under the hood, Scrivito has been using TypeScript for quite a while now, and it’s time to let Scrivito application developers benefit from TypeScript as well. Developing Scrivito apps is now much faster and less error prone than ever. This Scrivito SDK release...

Bugfixes Editing multi-value attributes In version 1.24.0, attributes of the multienum type, by means of which editors can select several values from a set of options, were not always displayed after a change. Now, all changes are reflected properly. In searches, date values close to the current...