Back to AsanaDuplicate A Task
Creates and returns a job that will asynchronously handle the duplication.
Input
type: object
properties:
parameters:
type: object
properties:
task_gid:
type: string
description: The task to operate on.
opt_pretty:
type: boolean
description: >-
Provides “pretty” output.
Provides the response in a “pretty” format. In the case of JSON this
means doing proper line breaking and indentation to make it readable.
This will take extra time and increase the response size so it is
advisable only to use this during debugging.
opt_fields:
type: array
items:
type: string
description: >-
Defines fields to return.
Some requests return *compact* representations of objects in order to
conserve resources and complete the request more efficiently. Other
times requests return more information than you may need. This option
allows you to list the exact set of fields that the API should be sure
to return for the objects. The field names should be provided as
paths, described below.
The id of included objects will always be returned, regardless of the
field options.
required:
- task_gid
title: Parameters
data:
type: object
properties:
data:
type: object
properties:
name:
description: The name of the new task.
type: string
example: New Task Name
include:
description: The fields that will be duplicated to the new task.
type: string
enum:
- notes
- assignee
- subtasks
- attachments
- tags
- followers
- projects
- dates
- dependencies
- parent
example:
- notes
- assignee
title: Data
Output
type: object
properties:
data:
type: object
properties:
gid:
description: Globally unique identifier of the resource, as a string.
type: string
readOnly: true
example: '12345'
x-insert-after: false
resource_type:
description: The base type of this resource.
type: string
readOnly: true
example: task
x-insert-after: gid
resource_subtype:
description: >-
The subtype of this resource. Different subtypes retain many of the
same fields and behavior, but may render differently in Asana or
represent resources with different semantic meaning.
type: string
readOnly: true
example: duplicate_task
status:
description: >-
The current status of this job. The value is one of: `not_started`,
`in_progress`, `succeeded`, or `failed`.
type: string
enum:
- not_started
- in_progress
- succeeded
- failed
readOnly: true
example: in_progress
new_project:
type: object
properties:
gid:
description: Globally unique identifier of the resource, as a string.
type: string
readOnly: true
example: '12345'
x-insert-after: false
resource_type:
description: The base type of this resource.
type: string
readOnly: true
example: task
x-insert-after: gid
name:
description: >-
Name of the project. This is generally a short sentence fragment
that fits on a line in the UI for maximum readability. However, it
can be longer.
type: string
example: Stuff to buy
new_task:
type: object
properties:
gid:
description: Globally unique identifier of the resource, as a string.
type: string
readOnly: true
example: '12345'
x-insert-after: false
resource_type:
description: The base type of this resource.
type: string
readOnly: true
example: task
x-insert-after: gid
name:
description: The name of the task.
type: string
example: Bug Task
resource_subtype:
type: string
description: >-
The subtype of this resource. Different subtypes retain many of
the same fields and behavior, but may render differently in Asana
or represent resources with different semantic meaning.
The resource_subtype `milestone` represent a single moment in
time. This means tasks with this subtype cannot have a start_date.
enum:
- default_task
- milestone
- section
- approval
example: default_task
new_project_template:
type: object
properties:
gid:
description: Globally unique identifier of the resource, as a string.
type: string
readOnly: true
example: '12345'
x-insert-after: false
resource_type:
description: The base type of this resource.
type: string
readOnly: true
example: task
x-insert-after: gid
name:
description: Name of the project template.
type: string
example: Packing list