![]() ![]() When the editorĬloses go-jira will submit the completed form. When you run command like jira edit it will open up your favorite editor with the templatized output so you can quickly edit. So something like -count -count will results in list -template table -query "sprint in openSprints() and type != epic and resolution = unresolved ORDER BY rank asc, created" fi Editing COUNTER will be an integer type that increments each time the option is used.Most of these are primitive data types an should be self-explanatory. type: string: The type of the option, can be one of these values: BOOL, COUNTER, ENUM, FLOAT32, FLOAT64, INT8, INT16, INT32, INT64, INT, STRING, STRINGMAP, UINT8, UINT16, UINT32, UINT64 and UINT.help: string The help message displayed in usage for the option. ![]() name: string Name of the option, so name: foobar will result in -foobar option.These are possible keys under the command options property: The value will be treated as a template and substitutions for options and arguments will be made before executing. script: string This is the script that will be executed as the action for this command.Typically used to shorten the command name or provide alternatives that users might expect. aliases: string list: This is a list of alternate names that the user can provide on the command line to run the same command.args: list This is the list of command arguments (like the ISSUE) that the command will accept.options: list This is the list of possible option flags that the command will accept.Then if you wanted jira foo baz to be called by default when you type jira foo you would set default: true for that custom command. If you wanted to have jira foo bar and jira foo baz you would have two commands with name: foo bar and name: foo baz. default: bool Use this for compound command groups.Sometimes useful for constructing complex commands where one custom command might call another. hidden: bool This command will be hidden from users, but still executable. ![]()
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