Breadcrumbs should include the parent task on subtasks
complete
Andrew Townsend
Any time breadcrumbs are shown on a subtask, it should include the parent task as well. If I have lots of subtasks that are along the lines of "Check with Dave" I need to know the parent task for each one. Otherwise I have to write the name of the parent task on every subtask.
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Brendan W
under review
Hey, everyone! Where do you notice this the most that is impacting your workflows?
We know we need to add it to Inbox breadcrumbs when you expand a row - anywhere else specifically? :)
J
Jocelyn Rutherford
I desperately need this feature on task lists in workspace dashboards!!
Sahira Seiffe
Hey, I keep on seeing this. I guess you are working bit by bit, but I think what most people really want, are full breadcrumbs everywhere.
List -> R2 User and testing FW adaptations plan
Task -> R2 N2
Subtask -> Battery monitor MAX17260
Sub-subtask -> Study the MAX17260SETD+ datasheet
(list view)
As you can see in this list view (subtasks as separate task, I am not seeing the main task name, I would appreciate if I always have the full breadcrumbs. Looking forward to this improvement. Thanks.
Brendan W
complete
Brendan W
open
Hey, everyone!
We've added the subtask's parent task name when in Inbox!
If there's anywhere else you want this added other then Inbox, please create a new Canny feature request for us to track it separately.
Vincent Cardinal
Brendan W It's simple : EVERYWHERE we can see a path !!!!!
E
Elizabeth Wetherholt
Brendan W do you know when this will be in effect? I still don't see any difference in my inbox?
E
Elizabeth Wetherholt
Brendan W when will this occur? I still don't see them in my inbox!
Brendan W
Elizabeth Wetherholt In Inbox, you can see them here after clicking into a notification group
E
Elizabeth Wetherholt
Brendan W Is it possible to see the breadcrumbs while looking at the inbox without having to click into each task? That is what we are asking for. 3.0 is missing this, but 2.0 had it nailed! Let me show you a little screencapture of my account and show you what I am talking about. I have hundreds of folders with the same task/subtask names (on purpose because that it what each job has to do). WIthout breadcrumbs I can't tell which folder it belongs to, and who the overdue belongs to. In 2.0 I could see all of this info at a glance, 3.0 makes this a giant headache. You will see several "shop drawings created" and "order fab tickets" and all of these are for separate projects, but I can't tell until I click into each one.
Craig Wallace
Full breadcrumbs are essential in Activity view, otherwise you literally have no idea which tasks displayed subtask activities relate to. But, as one other commenter said - Everywhere!
There's no reason to not show full breadcrumbs at all times.
S
Shreyansh Jain
The breadcrums of tasks in relationships should also be able to show the whole path instead of just list name. (Include parent tasks and parent subtasks names as well)
This is exceptionally important for relationships custom fields (eg. Next Action) as it is very tedious to copy task ids and then paste them regularly to map to the right tasks.
Without this it is very confusing if the tasks have similar names
Sydney
Merged in a post:
full breadcrumbs
Sahira Seiffe
We use 3-4 levels of subtasks, and some of our workflow are templated, so those subtasks are called the same. On the different views then I can enable to show the list it is in, and the name of the parent task, but it does not show the full breadcrumb, meaning:
I see: List > subtaskL1 > subtaskL2
I would like to see: List > task > subtaskL1 > subtaskL2
LBell
Brendan W Can we address this: "add it to Inbox breadcrumbs when you expand a row" <-- Please add breadcrumbs to Inbox without having to click through to a row!
The address of a task is paramount for understanding what's going on, and shouldn't be hidden behind a click.
Kaitlyn Riley
Home page - all cards. I have a lot of projects/clients that follow the same workflow/template and the parent task gives me visibility into what the specific project is.
M. Grossberg
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