

Indicates that work won't continue on an issue, pull request, or discussionĭefault labels are included in every new repository when the repository is created, but you can edit or delete the labels later. Indicates that an issue, pull request, or discussion needs more information Indicates that an issue, pull request, or discussion is no longer relevant Indicates that a maintainer wants help on an issue or pull request Indicates a good issue for first-time contributors Indicates similar issues, pull requests, or discussions

Indicates a need for improvements or additions to documentation Indicates an unexpected problem or unintended behavior

You can use these default labels to help create a standard workflow in a repository. GitHub provides default labels in every new repository. Once a label exists, you can use the label on any issue, pull request, or discussion within that repository. You can apply labels in the repository the label was created in. You can manage your work on GitHub by creating labels to categorize issues, pull requests, and discussions.
