Changelog Page
How the Changelog page is laid out, what each release card shows, and how unread updates are marked as read.
Open Changelog when you want the full release history in one place. This is the long-form view of product updates, so it is the best place to browse what changed last month, check when a feature first appeared, or catch up on several releases at once without relying only on the What's New popup.
How The Page Is Laid Out
- Year headings: releases are grouped by year first, so older updates stay easy to scan instead of becoming one long uninterrupted list.
- Version: each card starts with the version number for that release.
- Release date: shown under the version so you can place the update in time straight away.
- Badges: the page can show badges such as Major and New to help you spot releases that are either more significant or still unread on your account.
- Release notes body: the main text is rendered from the changelog entry itself, so headings and bullet points come through on the page instead of being flattened into one paragraph.
Mark As Read On The Page
If an entry is still unread, a Mark as read action appears on that release card. Use it when you want to clear one release without clearing everything else. Work Planner then updates your unread count in the app header so the changelog badge stays in sync with what you have already seen. The cross-screen behaviour is covered in Marking Updates as Read.
When To Use The Page Instead Of The Popup
- Use the page for browsing: it is easier to scroll through multiple releases here than in the popup.
- Use the page for older updates: if you want to revisit a past release after the unread count has already been cleared, the page is the more natural place to do it.
- Use the popup for quick catch-up: if you only want to clear the latest updates and get back to work, the popup is faster.
What Happens Elsewhere
This page uses the same changelog data as the sparkles badge in the app header and the What's New popup. Reading or clearing entries in one place affects the unread count everywhere else. That means you do not need to manage the same update twice.
Related articles
- What's New Popup: the quicker release summary that appears inside the app.
- Changelog Badge: the sparkles button that shows your unread count.
- Marking Updates as Read: how the unread state behaves across the page, badge, and popup.