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Tip |
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When to use itThis new screen is particularly useful in the following situations:
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Note |
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When not to use itIt is tempting to create thousands of Jira issues with it. Don't. You will then have questions about keeping those issues up-to-date with Confluence, or across baselines. The goal is not to copy the entire Confluence database into Jira. In fact, we've limited to 100 Jira issues per batch for the moment, until we improve scaling.
The value of Requirement Yogi comes from annotating free text. If you keep transforming free text into Jira issues, you are making it painful for you to manage requirements. Perhaps don't create Jira issues in anticipation. Only create issues for tasks that you are going to perform during the next Sprint. |
How it works
Explanation | Screenshot |
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Start from the Search screen, select a set of requirements and click on 'Create Jira issues'. Note: The limit by default is 2000 requirements. It is defined by the global limit, available in the administration. | |
Click on the blue plus button to create a new issue template. | |
Template configuration:
If the checkbox 'Group all in one link' is checked, it will create one issue for all the selected requirements, otherwise, it will create one issue per requirement. You can use some keywords to configure the issue's fields:
Note that these reserved keywords will be ignored if you create one issue for multiple requirements. Once an issue template is created, you can re-configure it. Note that only fields are editable. If you wish to change the project or the Jira instance, you will have to create a new issue template. | |
Select requirements and Drag and drop into an issue template and click on create issues. | |
Once issues are successfully created, they will appear on the right sidebar. |
Good to know
The templates limit is 30 per space.
You can't group more than 20 requirements in one Jira issue,
We truncate the summary to 253 characters because this is the Jira limit.
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