So I've been spending the past week and a half or so working on a new app: a web-based sprint board. Weapon of choice: Ruby on Rails (of course).
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It's all interactive AJAXy goodness, with some CSS 3 styling (drop shadows anyone ?). And Rails makes it really easy. I've been using the newest edition (version 3), and I really enjoyed working with it. It tries its hardest not to get in the way, which I love. There is a bit of a learning curve, though, as it requires knowledge of the basic patterns and idioms on which it is based. But the online documentation is, for the most part, excellent. I can also recommend the newest 'Agile Web Development with Rails' book, especially if you're a beginner.
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I was planning to give my sprint board a bit of a killer feature (in my eyes): Jira integration. I figured this would be real easy, making use of the JIRA4R Ruby client. This is basically a Ruby front for the SOAP interface which JIRA exposes. And there's the downer: as easy as Rails tries to make life for a developer, that's how hard the JIRA SOAP interface makes your life again.
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Only the most basic of information is easily available. But if you want to know, for instance, the remaining time estimate on an issue, you can forget it. I don't see a way to do this with the SOAP service they set up. Same thing for updating a status; how do you even do that ? And why can I get the custom field
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When you google for solutions, here's what people come up with: submit forms programmatically and parse the resulting HTML... Really, when you force developers into these kinds of patterns you have failed.
So: Rails great; JIRA ('s SOAP interface) bad.
5 comments:
OMG will the SCRUM madness take over the world? I'm currently in my third two-weekly sprint myself ;-)
Amateur! ;-) Our sprints are four week marathons. :-p
Do you use any tracking tools btw ? I have some Greenhooper experience now (yes, JIRA again), but I'm not a big fan. Which is why I wanted to try this projct in the first place.
We use an in-house developed Tracker tool. In-house as in: written by yours truly :-) This tool was started for tracking bugs. Since then tasks, activity logs, holidays, tickets (customer issues) and some other things have been added. Recently I changed the task system to allow some SCRUM specific functionalities. In addition we use an actual SCRUM board with paper cards :-)
Looks great Kris! Now buy a beamer and let it project on the wall for everybody to see :-)
Any chance you're going to opensource it?
@Crimson: that sounds like quite a nice piece of work. :-)
@Joram: sure, I'm willing to throw it onto sourceforge for people to play with. Can you come up with a good project name (the obvious ones are taken) ?
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