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Mostly people say Scrum and Agile interchangeably but what is the difference between Scrum Practice as compared to Agile Practice ?

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9 Answers

up vote 34 down vote accepted

Agile is a general philosophy regarding software production, Scrum is a an implementation of that philosophy pertaining specifically to project management.

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Agile and SCRUM are related but distinct. Agile describes a set of guiding principles for building software through iterative development. Agile principles are best described in the Agile Manifesto. SCRUM is a specific set of rules to follow when practicing agile software development.

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Scrum is a type of Agile method just like an apple is a type of fruit. Scrum is not the only Agile method though. The popular ones are:

  • Scrum
  • eXtreme Programming (XP)
  • Kanban

I'm sure there are more Agile methods but these are what I have experience with.

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+1 Others are Crystal, DSDM, FDD. – Don Roby Feb 9 '10 at 23:24

As is mentioned, Agile is a methodology, and there are various ways to define what agile is. To a large extent, if it involves constant unit testing and the ability to quickly adapt when the business needs change then it is probably agile. The opposite is the waterfall method.

There are various implementations that are codified by consultants, such as Xtremem Programming, Scrum and RUP (Rational Unified Process).

So, if you are using Scrum then you can switch between agile and scrum depending on if you are talking about the methodology or your implementation. You will want to see if the terms are being used correctly, by the context.

For example, if I am talking about the 15 min standup as part of my agile process, that is not necessarily needed to be agile, but scrum almost requires it, so when you interchange the terms, it is important to differentiate between the two concepts.

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Scrum is a very specific set of practices. Agile describes a family of practices, everything from Extreme Programming to Scrum and almost anything else that uses short iterations can claim Agile. That may not have originally been the case when the term was coined, but it certainly is by now.

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Scrum falls under the umbrella of Agile. Agile isn't Scrum but Scrum is Agile. At least that's the way PMI sees it. They are coming out with their own certification. See Agile Exam Questions

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Agile is commonly regarded as an umbrella term. Scrum/Kanban are executions of Agile guiding principles from a project management perspective, whereas eXtreme Programming (XP) focuses on the engineering practices e.g., Unit Testing, Continuous Integration, Pair Programming etc.

Typically: Agile = Scrum + XP

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Agile is not a methodology, embracing the agile manifesto means adopting a particular philosophy about software development. Within that philosophical perspective, there are many processes and practices. Scrum is a set of practices that follow agile principles. Many people grab onto the practices and processes without embracing (or even understanding) the underlying philosophy and they often end up with gorillarinas.

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Comparision of Agile to Scrum is similar to comparision of organism to one organ.

Scrum suggests the way of management while it doesn't prescribe everything what is necessary to do to be able to react fast on changes. Only by adding other agile techniques like continuous integration, extreme programming, test driven development your teams will be able to deliver products not just fast, but also product that customer wants with great quality.

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