When working with objects that include text, click the link icon on the context menu to insert a link into the text. Linking text Available on: desktop, tablet To paste a link on a board without the preview, use the text tool and paste the link into the text box. You can simply paste a link on your board using the shortcuts: Ctrl + V ( for Windows) or Cmd + V ( for Mac). It is possible to restore deleted content via the Activity list. If the linked object is deleted, users who follow the link will see the message " Sorry, the linked item has been deleted from this board". Just open the context menu, click the three dots, and choose Copy link. Share this link with your collaborators to draw their attention to the exact place on the board. You can get a direct link to any object on the board ( frames, images, shapes, etc.). To delete or edit the link, click the three dots on the context menu, choose Edit link.Ĭhange the link or click Delete link on the pop-up. The link icon will show the logo of the linked site To go to the linked URL - just click the link icon. You can create links to external websites, other Miro boards, particular objects on boards. Please note that an object on the board can be linked to only one website or Miro object. Insert the URL or click another object on the board that you want to link.Choose Link to or use Ctrl + K ( for Windows) or Cmd + K ( for Mac).Select an object and click the three dots on the context menu.Link stickies or cards to task tracker linksĪdding a link to an object Available on: desktop, tablet.Add links to references and useful sources.
Try Quip with your team by creating a free team site at or download the app from the App Store or Google Play.Īlready using Quip? Sign in to or launch your Quip desktop app to get started.Enrich your board content by linking any object to an external website or another object on the board. And since Quip anchor links work anywhere as a URL, you can send them in email, a chat app, or even text message, making it easy to tailor your communications to the people you're working with. When they see the link in Quip, they have context for where they'll be going - and when they click, they're exactly where they need to be. Sending anchor links to your documents is a great way to get feedback or contributions from colleagues in a way that saves them a bunch of time. The link will take them to the exact right spot in your document - complete with a highlight to make sure they can't miss what you're trying to show them. Just grab an anchor link and send it to someone in a chat or comment. Sending links to people directlyĪnchor links are also a fast way to loop someone into a very specific part of your work. If it's linking to a different document, it'll show the section you linked to and that document's name. If your anchor link refers to a section in the same document, it shows up as a reference to just the section. You can even link to a specific part of a different document. Or in the document's sub-sections, you can point people back to other helpful information: like putting an anchor link to the budget in the section of the document that's talking about swag. Here's where anchor links can help: In the summary at the top, you can use anchor links to let people quickly jump to other sections of the document - customer research, content planning, tasks, and so forth - instead of scrolling and scanning. And because you're good at your job, that document has a lot going on, helping you ensure a successful launch. Because you're using Quip, everything regarding your launch is in one place - a Quip doc.
Say for example that you're creating a marketing launch plan.
You can use anchor links to help people understand what's going inside a long or complex document. Where to paste your newly copied anchor link? Well, that depends! Linking to other parts of the same doc Just click your cursor anywhere in your document, then click Copy Anchor Link inside the blue tools bubble. With anchor links though, we've gotten even more granular: You can create an anchor link for a specific area of text anywhere in your document, not just headers. They let you scan the high-level content of a doc and explore areas you think you'd be most interested in. Last year we introduced document outlines: a great way to break long-form docs up into more digestible pieces. That's what you told us, at least - so we went ahead and built anchor links in Quip. With all the things you can include in a Quip document, like spreadsheets, checklists, and images, it would be nice to be able to direct people to specific parts of the doc.