Dependency Table

Since the 6.0 major version, a new layout is supported to analyze and report saved filter results and all their issue dependencies on a full-featured Pivot Table.

 

 

Locations

The Pivot table is available fro two locations.

  • The Jira main menu

 

  • As a gadget

NOTE: The Pivot table view can be converted into a gadget in a straightforward way by exporting it to a Dashboard.

User Interface & main steps

The pivot table is really user-friendly and intuitive, These are the main steps to work with:

  1. Search Filter: Type a saved filter name

  2. Add Custom Fields: to the dimension list (5)

  3. Include linked issues in the resulting domain: check on this option to include any linked issue (subtasks, core links, Epic, and Portfolio hierarchies) first level into the data set returned by the filter.

  4. Apply: Click on this button to execute the filter and get the issues

  5. Dimensions: A list with all the system and custom (2) fields supported to analyze the issues

  6. Rows and Columns: Drag & drop fields from the dimensions into the rows and columns to build you custom pivot table

  7. Zoom: adjust the pivot table content to the best fitting size that the user feels comfortable with

  8. Aggregator: choose among Count issues or Sum a numeric field.

  9. Links Filter: hide/show links types on the pivot table

  10. Search issue: Search for an issue based on its key or summary and highlight the results on the pivot table

  11. Export: the current pivot table configuration to a Dashboard or Excel

  12. Expand/Collapse: the header to increase the working area

The working area allows users to configure the content by drag&grop dimensions on the row and columns of the pivot table.

 

Drill down to issues (cells)

The Pivot table supports Count and Sum numeric and work time issue fields (aggregators)

  • The aggregator can be changed from the select box (8)

  • The result is displayed on each cell

  • Clicking on the aggregated result will open and list the issues of the cell on the Issue Navigator

 

Hierarchical analysis

The pivot table supports massive analytics of JQL results and it displays the first level (depth =1) of links.

However, the users may want to perform deeper analysis on concrete issues: clicking on the issue key link will open the Tree view dialog for full issue traceability and impact.

 

 

Dealing with large and complex data

Highlighting

Frequently a large number of issues and links make the data difficult to read.

To put the focus on a single issue and all its dependencies simply click on the issue item:

This will highlight the target issue and all its dependencies.

Alternatively, you can search for the issue from the select box (10):

 

The Links filter select (9) also allows showing and hiding links based on their type:

 

Hiding rows and columns

It is possible to hide concrete rows and columns by selecting the visible domain values from the select context menu of the dimensions:

 

Issue domain

By default, only the issues returned by the filter are taken into consideration. However, sometimes the users might also want to include all the linked issues into the resulting issue set.

This is possible by selecting the option below:

The included issues not present in the initial filter result are displayed with a light blue bar.

Exporting (to Excel)

The Pivot table view can be exported to Excel for further analytics:

 

This exports the full data (all the issues in the domain) to a native Excel file by preserving the users' configuration: dimensions (rows and columns) and their filters:

So, The Pivot Table can be viewed as a data selector deeply integrated with Jira that allows the users to quickly get the data for further and deeper analytics from Excel.