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An ongoing list of useful things you can do in Confluence!

CONTENTS

Deep Linking to Slack

Slack allows for linking to its application and even specific parts within the app via a specially formatted link. Their full documentation of this feature is here: Deep Linking

Linking to the NER Workspace

The general format:

slack://open?team={TEAM_ID}

Plugging in our workspace/team ID:

slack://open?team=T7MHAQ5TL

Our team ID will always be T7MHAQ5TL

Linking to a Channel

The general format:

slack://channel?team={TEAM_ID}&id={CHANNEL_ID}

Using #electrical as an example:

slack://channel?team=T7MHAQ5TL&id={CHANNEL_ID}

Finding a channel ID

Desktop App

  1. Click the channel name for more details

  2. Scroll to the bottom for the ID

In-Browser

Just look at the URL!

Your team ID starts with a T and your channel ID starts with a C

Mobile App

  1. Long press the channel and copy link

  2. The channel ID can be found as described above

Linking to a Person’s DMs

The general format:

slack://user?team={TEAM_ID}&id={USER_ID}

Using Matt as an example:

slack://user?team=T7MHAQ5TL&id=UNCFTKUAV

User IDs always start with a U

Finding a user ID

Desktop-App & Browser

  1. Open Profile of the user

  2. Click the button with 3 dots

  3. Copy member ID

Mobile App

Cry

Using Iframes

Confluence has awesome widgets to integrate nearly anything cleanly into a Confluence page (you can find these via inline / commands or the + at the top of the editing window). Sometimes these cannot handle everything however.

Iframes are a common tool used in web development to insert a window from one website into a “mini-browser” view of another. These can be used in Confluence to open just about any website when cleaner integrations don’t work.

This is a lot closer to editing the page in raw HTML/CSS, so do note it will look uglier and should be avoided when possible

One example of needing to use Iframes is for Google Calendar previews! Check out Calendars

Embedding Files From Google Drive

To embed a google doc or presentation into Confluence, the first step is to publish the document to the web. This is done by navigating to File → Share → Publish to the web.

Once you publish to the web, it will create a link at which you can view the document as a webpage. This window also includes settings to change who has access and to stop publishing the document.

CAUTION! Do not use the link in the picture above for the Widget URL! The widget will only connect properly if you use the normal sharing link for the google document.

Now that your file is published, go to the Confluence page you’d like to embed the doc in. Click the “+” icon, and insert a Widget Connector:

Once the widget connector is inserted, select it and click the “edit” button to change the URL of the embedded content. Enter the normal sharing URL for the google doc.

That’s it! You should get a window that shows a view of the document, and is updated automatically as the doc is edited.

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