Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view website/www/index.txt @ 5661:b08a308c273b
Better display for Link/Multilink and content
Link/Multilink are now displayed as a dictionary by default. The format
is controlled by the setting of the @verbose option. With @verbose=0 we
get the old behavior displaying only the id. With the default @verbose=1
we get a dictionary with the id and a link inside. With @verbose=2 or
larger we get the label property in the dictionary in addition (e.g. the
name of a status or the name of a file).
The content property is also handled differently now. For @verbose < 2
we get a dictionary with a link property in it. The property points to
the standard download link for the content (or message). For
@verbose >= 2 we get the previous behavior, the content property as a
possibly very large json string.
| author | Ralf Schlatterbeck <rsc@runtux.com> |
|---|---|
| date | Fri, 22 Mar 2019 14:03:37 +0100 |
| parents | e7293df727dc |
| children | b68d3d8531d5 29d428927362 |
line wrap: on
line source
Roundup Issue Tracker ===================== .. pypi-release:: roundup :prefix: Download :class: note Roundup is a simple-to-use and -install issue-tracking system with command-line, web and e-mail interfaces. It is based on the winning design from Ka-Ping Yee in the Software Carpentry "Track" design competition. The current stable version of Roundup is 1.6 which has quite a comprehensive :doc:`feature set <docs/features>`. For more information see the :doc:`design overview <docs/design>`, and all the other :doc:`documentation <docs>`. Roundup has been deployed for: * bug tracking and TODO list management (the classic installation) * customer help desk support (with a wizard for the phone answerers, linking to networking, system and development issue trackers) * issue management for IETF working groups * sales lead tracking * conference paper submission and double-blind referee management * weblogging (well, almost :) ...and so on. It's been designed with :doc:`flexibility <docs/customizing>` in mind - it's not just another bug tracker. Roundup ships with a *demo tracker* to play with - after you've unpacked the source, just run "python demo.py" and load up the URL it prints out! Roundup was originally released as version 0.1.1 in late August, 2001. The first `change note`_ I wrote says: Needed a bug tracking system. Looked around. Tried to install many Perl-based systems, to no avail. Got tired of waiting for Roundup to be released. Had just finished major product project, so needed something different for a while. Roundup here I come... .. _`download`: http://cheeseshop.python.org/pypi/roundup .. _`change note`: https://sourceforge.net/p/roundup/code/ci/tip/tree/CHANGES.txt
