Bugs are work items that are frequently encountered during a project and during operations. In the process of dealing with each bug, it is also important to record the corresponding content of the bug through the project management system. Here's how to do the bug creation work with TFS.
First we look at the standard processing of bugs, bug escalation, bug handling, and bug closure. This film will mainly describe how to create a bug work item in the system based on this.
Let's take a look at the root cause of the bug, where we assume that the bug is due to the error in the Yearlyincome definition in the view code that leads to inaccurate mining model processing.
Open the View definition code, you can see the words should be low, is spelled as Llow.
Next, create a work item in the system that is related to the bug. Open Team Explorer, and of course you can open it in the Web page, where you select the page and click the bug link.
The system will pop up an interface that allows us to enter the most basic information about the bug, which contains the definitions of bugs commonly used in the project and operations process.
Some of the more critical information needs to be carefully filled out;
Bug brief, assign to WHO and how important, followed by the method of how to reproduce the bug, and what kind of test case can explain that the bug is fix off.
Information about this bug can be updated at any time in the history department.
After you save each record, you can see the information update record below, and what the current state of the bug is.
At this point a bug work item is created in TFS. When you close the TFS interface and back here, you can navigate to all work item interfaces by simply working on the top of the page.
Click Assign to me on the left to see all the work items registered to the current user, and you can see that a work item with a serial number of 3 has just been created.
Defining a query in TFS is also an action that is often used, and the following shows how to define a query in Visual Studio that is broadly consistent with the way the Web page is defined.
Here is a demonstration of how visual Studio 2013 will work, with a slight difference in previous versions. Select a work item.
Click New Query.
Open the query definition form, where you can define the criteria related to the query.
Click New line to add a condition, field select assigned to.
Then choose @ Me in the value.
Click Save to create a new name for the query.
Now that a query has been created, this query will be used in subsequent work, in addition to the queries that you can use frequently in your project as needed.
The next article describes the actions that are involved in handling this bug.
[Bi Project record]-bug creation