![]() We will next look at connecting to a GitHub repository and the issues associated. With this set, commits that contain an issue number will be shown in the editor or version control history. ![]() We can now give the URL for our YouTrack server. ![]() Open Settings | Version Control | Issue Navigation and select the Add YouTrack Pattern button on the right side as shown below. We can also set up our solution so that we can navigate to tasks from Rider’s version control. We can update some other options here, as well as test the connection. We will need the URL for it, along with our username and password. First, we will select the YouTrack server to be used for the current project in Rider. Setting up Rider to have access to tasks or issues in YouTrack is very easy. You can configure task track under the Settings ( Ctrl+Alt+S, I’m using the Visual Studio keyboard scheme here), then Tools | Tasks | Servers. In this post, we will be looking at YouTrack and GitHub. The first thing we need to do is set up Rider and add the platform that our teams use for their issue and task tracking systems. Configuring Integration with Issue Trackers Here’s some info on how to manage plugins in Rider. If not, enable it in the settings under Plugins | Installed. Note: the Task Management plugin is installed and enabled by default. Let’s begin! Just remember that Rider supports YouTrack, JIRA, GitHub issues, Trello, GitLab and more! In this post, we will be looking at two of these platforms, how to set up Rider to integrate with those lists of tasks and finally how to work with them inside the IDE. What if we could work directly in Rider on those GitHub issues that have been assigned to us? We live in a world of teams, and with teams comes communication about our software projects in terms of what work needs to be done and bugs that have been discovered.
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