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The image below demonstrates an example of an Excel template that iterates over labels.
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Issue Activity
Changes to issues are registered in the Issue Activity, but it is not known in advance how many changes are going to be made. You can iterate a section over all the activities of an issue. This allows you to create a table that dynamically grows according to the number of existing activities. The notation is:
Activity Fields | Description |
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Title | The title of the issue |
Summary | The summary of the activity |
Content | When an activity involves a change in the Issue contents, this field displays the new contents |
Author | The author of the activity |
AuthorEmail | The email of the author of the activity |
Published | The time the issue was published |
Updated | The time the issue was updated |
Categories | When an activity regards an Issue Status change, this field displays the new Issue Status |
Code Block | ||||
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#{for activityEntries}
${ActivityEntries[n].Title}
${ActivityEntries[n].Summary}
${ActivityEntries[n].Content}
${ActivityEntries[n].Author}
${ActivityEntries[n].AuthorEmail}
${dateformat("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss"):ActivityEntries[n].Published}
${dateformat("dd-MM-yyyy HH:mm:ss"):ActivityEntries[n].Updated}
${ActivityEntries[n].Categories}
#{end}
or
#{for <VariableName>=ActivityEntriesCount}
Content and Issue Mappings. Example: ${ActivityEntries[VariableName].Field}
#{end} |
Info |
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We suggest that you use the html function to render the data because almost all content is HTML, e.g., ${html:ActivityEntries[n].Title} |
Below is an example of using the Activity iteration in a Word template:
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Below is an example of using the Activity iteration in an Excel template:
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Project Versions
You can iterate over all project versions to which the issue belong to. The notation is:
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