Adding Checklists in JIRA consists of setting up Checklist definitions which basically act as templates from which the issue's Checklist are created. This is where you set up Global Items and determine the context in which the Checklist will be displayed.
When installed for the first time, the Checklist add-on creates a default Checklist definition. You can either rename or delete it if you want to create your own definitions. |
To add definitions for Checklist, ensure that you have administrator rights in JIRA and that you can access the administrative menus. |
To add a new definition for the Checklist add-on, perform the following steps:
You can create multiple definitions if you want to have more than one Checklist in an issue. |
Global Items are items that are applicable to all issues. They are useful when you want to standardize a set of Checklist items across all issues. Every time you modify, add, or remove a global item, the issue's Checklist immediately reflects the changes.
To add a new global item, perform the following steps:
If you have added Global Item Templates, the system displays the templates that match your searched text. To select a specific template, click the template.
You can temporarily remove a global item from every Checklists.
To do so, toggle the Active button beside the item's name. Once disabled, the item disappears from all Checklists but remains in the list of Global Items.
This is a great mechanism if you want to track the progression of a Definition of Done (DoD) over time. Once a DoD item is well ingrained in the team's practice, you can disable the item and add a new item to the DoD. |
If you want to restrict the visibility of a specific Checklist, you can set the context. By default, Checklists are visible in all the issues. By setting the context, the Checklist becomes only visible for the selected project(s) and/or issue type(s).
To set context, perform the following steps:
Be careful when you remove projects or issue types from the context. The changes will be immediately effective and may cause some Checklists to be permanently removed. |
Next-gen projects are the new type of projects in Jira. Among other changes every such project has its own internal set of Issue Types which is only used by this project and is not shared. So if you're applying your definition to some specific kind of issue type(s) (in contrast to applying it to 'Any issue type'), please select all relevant next-gen issue types accordingly.
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