- Name 
                  
               
- Name of the next state in the workflow when this action is taken on an issue. For example, in the default workflow when an
                  
                  Unreviewed issue is confirmed as a bug, 
                  Issue Manager moves the issue to the next state, 
                  Dev-Ready. 
                  
               
- Reason Code 
                  
               
- Optional keyword that describes why an issue has changed from the current state to the new state when this action is taken.
                  Select the appropriate option: 
                  
                   
                      
                     
                     - No Change 
                        
                     
- No Change indicates that the keyword is retained when the issue moves to the new state. It will appear in the Reason Code
                        field of the Issue Details page. For example, the following workflow shows that when a developer claims to have fixed a bug,
                        the bug moves to the QA-Ready state with a reason code of Fixed. If a QA engineer verifies the claim, then the bug moves to
                        the Closed state while retaining the Fixed reason code. Any user browsing issues can easily see the reason the bug has been
                        closed by looking at the reason code. 
                        
                     
- Clear 
                        
                     
- Indicates that the reason code for the current state will be removed when the issue moves to the new state. Clear is a reasonable
                        choice when an issue returns to a previous state in the workflow (for example, when a developer claims to have fixed a bug,
                        the bug moves to the 
                        QA-Ready state with a reason code of Fixed). If, however, the “fix” is rejected, the issue is sent back to Development (Dev- Ready) and the 
                        Fixed reason code is removed, since this claim is disputed. When you choose 
                        Clear, the workflow displays 
                        CLEAR in the 
                        Reason Code field; however, the user sees an empty 
                        Reason Code field on the 
                        Issue Details page. 
                        
                     
- Set to 
                        
                     
-  
                        
                        Indicates that you can associate a reason code with this action. Enter a keyword of up to 20 characters. All capital letters
                           is recommended. Use 
                           Set To to specify a reason code when an action moves an issue to a new state that requires a reason code. In general, you should
                           assign reason codes to all actions that developers take. 
                           
                         For example, in the default workflow the 
                           Fixed action on the 
                           Dev-Ready state sends the issue to the 
                           QA-Ready state with a reason code of 
                           Fixed. What this means in terms of human behavior is that when a developer claims that a bug has been fixed, he hands it off to
                           a QA engineer, who can now easily scan the 
                           Issue Details page to see why the bug is in his or her inbox (the bug could also be there because the developer can’t fix it or the software
                           is working as designed). 
                           
                         
 
               If you do not use reason codes
 
                
               
               Reason codes are optional keywords that can help to minimize the number of states in your workflow. For example, rather than
                  defining several closing states (Not a Bug, 
                  Not Reproducible, 
                  Not Repro, and 
                  Duplicate) one terminal state is sufficient where reason codes help explain why the issue is in the 
                  Closed state. If you decide not to use reason codes, you may need to have several terminal states. A state can be made a terminal
                  state by selecting the radio button called 
                  No one (Terminal State), which appears as a choice in the 
                  State Owner field of the 
                  State Properties dialog.