...
- Illustrate the relative progress and size of Features within a release or project.
- Engage stakeholders with a an easily understood representation of the features and their level of progress
...
- The relative size of the features as well as their level of completeness.
- Filter by state e.g. to show which features are currently being worked on or are about to be started
- Can be used at both the feature or epic levels.
- Typically in TFS/VSTS. The feature Feature is the parent of stories/bugs, whilst Epic is the grandparent. However, this can be changed, so your team may use different terms.
- The 'unparented' row shows how many stories/bugs do not have a parent feature Feature or grandparent epicEpic. You can choose to toggle this row on or offoff
Caution: The accuracy of this chart depends on how well the work item hierarchy is maintained. If the proportion of unparented items is high then it is likely that the progress bars will be incomplete and inaccurate.
...
This chart is often used for an overall project view, however, you can reduce the number of Features by selecting specific versionsIteration paths, components Area paths or labelsTags.
You will need to name and save the chart for future reference.
Display options
Selection | Description |
---|---|
Show Count/Effort | Toggle between effort (the total of child story point sizes) or count (the number of children) |
Hide/Show Title Data | Toggle on/off the table showing parameters used to select data for the chart |
Viewing the chart
Choose the states that you want shown (1)
...
As with all the charts you can click on an element of the chart (1) and see all the issues and bugs within the Feature, Clicking on the issue (2) will open it within JIRAVSTS