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authorSarrah Vesselov <svesselov@gitlab.com>2018-05-17 21:46:20 +0000
committerSarrah Vesselov <svesselov@gitlab.com>2018-05-17 21:46:20 +0000
commitd6c8a55189d62430c7ca4ffa6e5bb63f15a7efc1 (patch)
tree636303ebcc904b39679ae7af33ca4fffffb4b68b
parent09a387b5e7ac5221be3073b68461526c3a0dcc4a (diff)
parent35b37cfbc39cac341ed4caec5c4baaf0646a4b66 (diff)
downloadgitlab-ce-d6c8a55189d62430c7ca4ffa6e5bb63f15a7efc1.tar.gz
Merge branch 'update-ux-section' into 'master'
add specific details related to how the UX team uses labels to tackle issues See merge request gitlab-org/gitlab-ce!18927
-rw-r--r--CONTRIBUTING.md21
1 files changed, 19 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/CONTRIBUTING.md b/CONTRIBUTING.md
index 5447ebbdd8c..383d13656e2 100644
--- a/CONTRIBUTING.md
+++ b/CONTRIBUTING.md
@@ -168,7 +168,7 @@ hits. They are not always necessary, but very convenient.
If you are an expert in a particular area, it makes it easier to find issues to
work on. You can also subscribe to those labels to receive an email each time an
-issue is labelled with a subject label corresponding to your expertise.
+issue is labeled with a subject label corresponding to your expertise.
Examples of subject labels are ~wiki, ~"container registry", ~ldap, ~api,
~issues, ~"merge requests", ~labels, and ~"container registry".
@@ -296,7 +296,24 @@ any potential community contributor to @-mention per above.
## Implement design & UI elements
-Please see the [UX Guide for GitLab].
+For guidance on UX implementation at GitLab, please refer to our [Design System](https://design.gitlab.com/).
+
+The UX team uses labels to manage their workflow.
+
+The ~"UX" label on an issue is a signal to the UX team that it will need UX attention.
+To better understand the priority by which UX tackles issues, see the [UX section](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/ux/) of the handbook.
+
+Once an issue has been worked on and is ready for development, a UXer applies the ~"UX ready" label to that issue.
+
+The UX team has a special type label called ~"design artifact". This label indicates that the final output
+for an issue is a UX solution/design. The solution will be developed by frontend and/or backend in a subsequent milestone.
+Any issue labeled ~"design artifact" should not also be labeled ~"frontend" or ~"backend" since no development is
+needed until the solution has been decided.
+
+~"design artifact" issues are like any other issue and should contain a milestone label, ~"Deliverable" or ~"Stretch", when scheduled in the current milestone.
+
+Once the ~"design artifact" issue has been completed, the UXer removes the ~"design artifact" label and applies the ~"UX ready" label. The Product Manager can use the
+existing issue or decide to create a whole new issue for the purpose of development.
## Issue tracker