As many of you may know, in Laravel 11, the default skeleton has been changed. Personally, I believe the new skeleton is making things more complicated, ironically, the intention was to make things slim and simple. So, here we are, with the Laravel 10 skeleton upgraded to Laravel 11.
Probably there's some missing stuff, if you see something missing, please let me know.
This skeleton only upgrades related packages to Laravel 11 and keeps the rest as it is in Laravel 10. This repository is not affiliated in any way with the Laravel trademark. In the README.md file, I've kept the original Laravel README file and added this section on top of it.
Laravel is a web application framework with expressive, elegant syntax. We believe development must be an enjoyable and creative experience to be truly fulfilling. Laravel takes the pain out of development by easing common tasks used in many web projects, such as:
- Simple, fast routing engine.
- Powerful dependency injection container.
- Multiple back-ends for session and cache storage.
- Expressive, intuitive database ORM.
- Database agnostic schema migrations.
- Robust background job processing.
- Real-time event broadcasting.
Laravel is accessible, powerful, and provides tools required for large, robust applications.
Laravel has the most extensive and thorough documentation and video tutorial library of all modern web application frameworks, making it a breeze to get started with the framework.
You may also try the Laravel Bootcamp, where you will be guided through building a modern Laravel application from scratch.
If you don't feel like reading, Laracasts can help. Laracasts contains thousands of video tutorials on a range of topics including Laravel, modern PHP, unit testing, and JavaScript. Boost your skills by digging into our comprehensive video library.
We would like to extend our thanks to the following sponsors for funding Laravel development. If you are interested in becoming a sponsor, please visit the Laravel Partners program.
- Vehikl
- Tighten Co.
- WebReinvent
- Kirschbaum Development Group
- 64 Robots
- Curotec
- Cyber-Duck
- DevSquad
- Jump24
- Redberry
- Active Logic
- byte5
- OP.GG
Thank you for considering contributing to the Laravel framework! The contribution guide can be found in the Laravel documentation.
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If you discover a security vulnerability within Laravel, please send an e-mail to Taylor Otwell via taylor@laravel.com. All security vulnerabilities will be promptly addressed.
The Laravel framework is open-sourced software licensed under the MIT license.