2.2 KiB
stage | group | info | type | description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Create | Source Code | To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments | reference | Autocomplete characters in Markdown fields. |
Autocomplete characters (FREE)
Introduced in GitLab 13.9: you can search using the full name in user autocomplete.
The autocomplete characters provide a quick way of entering field values into Markdown fields. When you start typing a word in a Markdown field with one of the following characters, GitLab progressively autocompletes against a set of matching values. The string matching is not case sensitive.
Character | Autocompletes | Relevant matches shown |
---|---|---|
~ |
Labels | 20 |
% |
Milestones | 5 |
@ |
Users and groups | 10 |
# |
Issues | 5 |
! |
Merge requests | 5 |
& |
Epics | 5 |
$ |
Snippets | 5 |
: |
Emoji | 5 |
/ |
Quick Actions | 100 |
When you select an item from the list, the value is entered in the field. The more characters you enter, the more precise the matches are.
Autocomplete characters are useful when combined with Quick Actions.
User autocomplete
Assume your GitLab instance includes the following users:
Username | Name |
---|---|
alessandra | Rosy Grant |
lawrence.white | Kelsey Kerluke |
leanna | Rosemarie Rogahn |
logan_gutkowski | Lee Wuckert |
shelba | Josefine Haley |
User autocompletion sorts by the users whose username or name start with your query first.
For example, typing @lea
shows leanna
first and typing @ros
shows Rosemarie Rogahn
and Rosy Grant
first.
Any usernames or names that include your query are shown afterwards in the autocomplete menu.
You can also search across the full name to find a user.
To find Rosy Grant
, even if their username is for example alessandra
, you can type their full name without spaces like @rosygrant
.