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Reference your stuff with @-mentions

Point the assistant at a specific document for accurate, grounded answers.

Beginner · ~5 min · Prerequisites: None

What you'll do

Attach a document to your message as context so the assistant answers from your actual content — not generic knowledge — and knows exactly which page you mean.

The quick way: just ask

"@Q3 Review Doc What were the top three risks we identified?"

Type @, pick the document, then ask your question. The assistant reads from that document and quotes or summarises what it finds.

Steps

Type @ in the composer

In any assistant composer, type @. A search popover opens with a Documents group at the top. Start typing to filter by title — the list narrows as you type.

Pick a document from the list

Click or press Enter on the document you want. An inline chip — showing the document's icon and title — appears in your message. Your cursor sits right after the chip, ready for you to continue typing.

Ask a question about it

Finish your message and send. The assistant reads the full document and grounds its answer in that content. For example:

"@Project Charter Can you summarise the success criteria in three bullets?"

You'll get an answer drawn from the document's actual text rather than a generic response.

Know what happens with restricted documents

If you @-mention a document you don't have access to, the chip renders as Restricted document — the assistant can't read it and the title won't be disclosed. Only documents you can view are readable by the assistant on your behalf.

You can mention multiple documents in one message. Each becomes a chip, and the assistant reads all of them as context for your question.

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