5/23/2023 0 Comments Confluence roadmap planner widget![]() You have embedded a Tom's Planner Gantt chart on your Confluence page. It doesn't look like much when you are still editing the page, but when you click on the preview button of the page, the result will look something like this: The macro will insert an iframe in your Confluence Page. Just play around with these settings to discover what works best for your chart and/or page.Īfter you have set the width and height, you can click the insert button at the bottom of the window. Then you need to scroll down the left column of the window a bit to enter the width and height of the chart: Did you copy url correctly?Īfter you have found and copied the url we go back to the Confluence app and paste it in 'insert iframe macro' window we just opened: If this step-by-step guide doesn't give you the result you want, this is the first place to check if something went wrong. Don't include the single quotes at the start and the end! Be sure to start at the 'https' part and the end at the 'zoom=9' part. It's underlined in red.Ĭopy the whole address. In the 'embed code', as shown in the picture above, you can find the url of your Gantt chart that allows you to embed it on a Confluence page. follow the instructions until you get to this window:.click on the 'embed your schedule' link in the window that just opened.click on the 'share/collaborate online' button in the top toolbar.open the chart that you would like to embed.open the Tom's Planner tool in your browser.You can find that url in the Tom's Planner app: In this case the url is the internet address of your Tom's Planner Gantt chart. So let's start with the url of the Gantt chart you would like to show in the iframe. First the url (internet address) of the Gantt chart you would like to embed and secondly the width and height you would like the iframe (and so also your chart) to have. You have to fill in at least two things to make this work properly. A window will open which will allow you to configure the iframe that you are going to insert in your page. This guide will explain to you how to insert an iframe with your Tom's Planner Gantt chart on a Confluence page.įirst search for the term 'iframe' in the window with all the macros: Iframes allow you to show web pages from elsewhere on the web right in your Confluence page. One of the macros inserts an iFrame in your page. This opens a window with a collection of different macros. ![]() Click on the 'insert more content' button in the top toolbar of that page and choose the 'Other macros' option in the menu that appears: In Confluence, open the page where you would like to add the Tom's Planner Gantt chart to. You can do this by adding an iFrame to a page, but it's not as simple to do as we would like it to be. Recently we got a question from one of our users on how to embed a Tom's Planner Gantt chart on a page in Atlassian's Confluence app. There are some missing which I add later.How to Embed a Gantt chart in Atlassian's Confluence software Saturday, 2 May, 2015 I started with the “Software Project” template, since it has many of the best widgets in place.Confluence spaces allow many of the widgets to operate properly, for example the ‘recently updated’ and ‘todo items’ will pull only from my working space, and I won't have to mess around with the 'meeting minutes' - they'll just go where they're supposed to.I’m not saying this is the best/only way to do this, just wanted to share what works well so far: 5 Steps to set up a new Project In addition to tracking meetings and open Todo’s. With Confluence I can see ‘the latest’ at any point, from anywhere, and so can everyone else. This is a Tech Services project I just moved over to Confluence from a bunch of word documents which got stale and lost between my different computers and the network share folders. Migrating “Network Wellness DMAIC” to Confluence This post is meant to outline the process I'm using, and serve as a tutorial for new adopters of the tech. ![]() I'm a couple of months into using Atlassian's Confluence and JIRA for Program Management.
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