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date | title | slug | weight | toc | draft | aliases | menu |
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2023-03-04T19:00:00+00:00 | Labels | labels | 13 | false | false | [/en-us/labels] | [{sidebar [{parent usage} {name Labels} {weight 13} {identifier labels}]}] |
Labels
You can use labels to classify issues and pull requests and to improve your overview over them.
Creating Labels
For repositories, labels can be created by going to Issues
and clicking on Labels
.
For organizations, you can define organization-wide labels that are shared with all organization repositories, including both already-existing repositories as well as newly created ones. Organization-wide labels can be created in the organization Settings
.
Labels have a mandatory name, a mandatory color, an optional description, and must either be exclusive or not (see Scoped Labels
below).
When you create a repository, you can ensure certain labels exist by using the Issue Labels
option. This option lists a number of available label sets that are configured globally on your instance. Its contained labels will all be created as well while creating the repository.
Scoped Labels
Scoped labels are used to ensure at most a single label with the same scope is assigned to an issue or pull request. For example, if labels kind/bug
and kind/enhancement
have the Exclusive option set, an issue can only be classified as a bug or an enhancement.
A scoped label must contain /
in its name (not at either end of the name). The scope of a label is determined based on the last /
, so for example the scope of label scope/subscope/item
is scope/subscope
.
Filtering by Label
Issue and pull request lists can be filtered by label. Selecting multiple labels shows issues and pull requests that have all selected labels assigned.
By holding alt to click the label, issues and pull requests with the chosen label are excluded from the list.