content
"}},Qt={element:"span",mutate:function(e){e.setAttribute("style","display: -webkit-flex; display: -ms-flexbox; display: flex;"),e.innerHTML='hello'}},Yt={element:"form",mutate:function(e){e.setAttribute("tabindex",0),e.setAttribute("disabled","disabled")}},en={element:"a",mutate:function(e){return e.href="#void",e.innerHTML='content
",e.firstElementChild}},xn=function(e){if(!e.ownerSVGElement&&"svg"!==e.nodeName.toLowerCase())return!1;var t=s();e.appendChild(t);var n=t.querySelector("input");return n.focus(),n.disabled=!0,e.removeChild(t),!0},yn={element:"div",mutate:function(e){return e.innerHTML=c('In this post we discuss the advantages of running GitLab Enterprise Edition, our paid version of GitLab.
This blog post will give a short overview on how GitLab bugs are handled, and what you can do after you identify a potential bug in GitLab.
At GitLab we believe that by preventing force pushes and by stimulating code review practices, mistakes can be easily avoided and code quality will improve.
Sometimes you need additional control over pushes to your repository. For each project you can have unique Git Hooks.
Find out which plan works best for your team
Learn about pricingLearn about what GitLab can do for your team
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