@@ -15,6 +15,14 @@ With the Issue Board you can have a different view of your issues while also
maintaining the same filtering and sorting abilities you see across the
issue tracker.
Below is a table of the definitions used for GitLab's Issue Board.
| How we call it | What it means |
| -------------- | ------------- |
| **Issue Board** | It represents a different view for your issues. It can have multiple lists with each list consisting of issues represented by cards. |
| **List** | Each label that exists in the issue tracker can have its own dedicated list. Every list is named after the label it is based on and is represented by a column which contains all the issues associated with that label. You can think of a list like the results you get when you filter the issues by a label in your issue tracker. |
| **Card** | Every card represents an issue and it is shown under the list for which it has a label for. The information you can see on a card consists of the issue number, the issue title, the assignee and the labels associated with it. You can drag cards around from one list to another. Issues inside lists are [ordered by priority](labels.md#prioritize-labels). |
There are three types of lists, of which two are default:
-**Backlog** (default): shows all issues that do not fall in one of the other
...
...
@@ -26,86 +34,116 @@ There are three types of lists, of which two are default:
---
Below is a table of the definitions used for GitLab's Issue Board.
In short, here's a list of actions you can take in an Issue Board:
| Term | Definition |
| ---- | ----------- |
| **Issue Board** | It can have multiple lists with each list consisting of issues represented by cards. |
| **List** | Each label that exists in the issue tracker can have its own dedicated list. Every list is named after the label it is based on and is represented by a column which contains all the issues associated with that label. You can think of a list like the results you get when you filter the issues by a label in your issue tracker. |
| **Card** | Every card represents an issue. The information you can see on a card consists of the issue number, the issue title and the labels associated with it. You can drag cards around from one lists to another. Issues are [ordered by priority](labels.md#prioritize-labels). |
-[Add a new list](#adding-a-new-list).
-[Remove an existing list](#removing-a-list).
- Drag issues between lists.
- Drag and reorder the lists themselves.
- Change issue labels on-the-fly while dragging issues between lists.
- Close an issue if you drag it to the **Done** list.
- Add a new list from a non-existing label by creating the label on-the-fly.
-[Filter issues](#filtering-issues) that appear across your Issue Board.
## Functionality
If you are not able to perform one or more of the things above, make sure you
have the right [permissions](#permissions).
The Issue Board consists of lists appearing as columns. Each list you add is
named after and based on the labels that already exist in your issue tracker.
Issues can be seen as cards and they can easily be moved between the lists, as
to create workflows. The issues inside each list are sorted by priority.
## First time using the Issue Board
The first time you navigate to your Issue Board, you will be presented with the
two special lists (**Backlog** and **Done**) and a welcoming message that
The starting point is two lists: **Backlog** and **Done**. The **Backlog**
list shows all issues that do not fall in one of the other lists. Drag a card
to the **Done** list and the relevant issue will be closed.
two special lists (**Backlog** and **Done**) and a welcoming message that gives
you two options. You can either create a predefined set of labels and add their
corresponding lists to the Issue Board or opt-out and use your own lists.
Here's a list of actions you can take in an Issue Board: