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hiddentrue
nameDescription

At its core, Requirement Yogi is very simple. There are 3 ways to insert the macro, find out what they are here.

At its core, Requirement Yogi is very simple...

If you prefer to check our tutorial video check this out: https://youtu.be/9oxI03zobBg , it won’t take longer than 4 minutes!

Widget Connectoroverlayyoutube_templatecom/atlassian/confluence/extra/widgetconnector/templates/youtube.vmwidth400pxurl

Learn the basics in less than 4 minutes:

https://
wwwyoutube.com/watch?v=9oxI03zobBgheight200px

3 ways to insert the macro

Alt + Shift + R (or Option + Shift + R on Mac)

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Or the "Insert more content" menu.

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Or type "{" then "req"

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What’s the purpose of the macro?

When the page is saved, the macro makes the whole line into a requirement. Example:

In the editor

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When viewing the page

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Displaying the popup

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Where can I see requirements?

Thanks to the macro, requirements have a unique hyperlink. Requirements can be seen:

In the popup

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In the text, the popup that references to this requirement

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In other requirements (in which case they're called dependencies)

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In the search

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In JIRA

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Do's and Don't

Do

Don't

Write relatively short titles for your requirements, then add details in other columns.

Don't write a full document inside a requirement. It is not useful for a user to display "everything" in JIRA, especially since it is not designed for it. Confluence is much better at displaying content.

Use a table to structure your requirements, link one requirement per row.

Better not try to define a full paragraph or section of a document as a requirement.

Use short requirement keys with a prefix. Example: "FUNCTIONAL-001" or "FN-001".

Use spaces or expressions as requirement keys. Only letters, numbers, underscore (_), hyphen (-) and dot (.) are accepted.

Don't use the view mode's "inline creation" if you're starting. That only becomes useful when you're tired of importing requirements from Word.

Tips

🚀 That's all you need to know, literally!

Everything else is tools around the Requirement macro. Get going with your job!

But keep it simple, start with writing requirements!