Agile
A sprint is a short, fixed period of time - usually one to four weeks - during which a team commits to completing a set amount of work, most often in the Scrum agile framework.
Definition
A sprint is a short, fixed period of time - usually one to four weeks - during which a team commits to completing a set amount of work, most often in the Scrum agile framework.
A sprint is the heartbeat of Scrum. At the start, the team plans which backlog items it will take on; during the sprint, it works to finish them; at the end, it reviews the result and reflects on how to improve.
Sprints create a predictable rhythm and force work to be broken into shippable increments. Because the time box is fixed, scope is what flexes - the team commits to what it can realistically finish.
Atlas supports sprint-style work with backlogs, boards, and burndown, so an agile team can plan, run, and review sprints inside the same workspace as the rest of the company.
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