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Is there a way in TFS in VS2010 to specify that a particular iteration is the current one, and then return that for use in queries similar to the way @Project works? If not is there a way to do sub-queries in TFS work item queries?

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5 Answers 5

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Looks like Microsoft listened. @CurrentIteration is being added as a token.

That’s great, of course. When looking to write a query against the current sprint, however, you are in danger of losing sight of unclosed work items in previous sprints. When you reach for @CurrentIteration, you probably just mean “all unfinished work that has been committed to a sprint.” If you filter to a single sprint, you’ll miss any stragglers you failed to close or move forward from previous sprints.

Consider using the following pattern, where “ScrumOfScrums\Release 1.0.0.0″ is your backlog path, and all of your sprint paths are children to that:

TFS query of work items Under the backlog iteration node, but not equal to the backlog iteration node. Also not Closed.

Filter for work items under your backlog iteration node, but not equal to the backlog iteration node. That will give you all items committed to a sprint.

This will also catch any items that weren’t closed in your previous sprints. Since the goal is to close every item in a sprint before moving to the next one, this query pattern will generally be better than using @CurrentIteration, unless you're looking to find the closed items in the current iteration.

P.S. While this is an old question, it was my top hit when I searched for info on querying the current iteration in TFS.

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I'm afraid that there is not such a macro. I personally just have a few "X in current iteration" team queries and then edit those queries to point to the new iteration path at the start of each iteration.

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I am going to try using a standard name for the current iteration such as 'Current'. The queries for this iteration would all reference this name. Once the iteration is completed, I will rename it using a naming convention that includes the date for example and the next iteration would then be created with the name 'Current' (or renamed to this if it already exists). The queries would then return results from the new iteration.

- 2010-49
- Current
- 2010-51

I am not sure whether renaming iterations this way will cause any conflicts or confuse the data warehouse for example but this would save on having to create or modify a heap of queries at the start of each iteration.

I would be very interested to hear feedback on this approach!

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Query for Sprint in a date interval as shown here:

    Team Project    =   @Project
And Work Item Type  =   Sprint
And Start Date  <=  @Today
And Finish Date >=  @Today
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  • In Team Foundation (Cloud), this does not work as Work Item Type cannot be a Sprint. Jun 26, 2013 at 13:26
  • After you get the sprint (or iteration), you can query for the children of that sprint/iteration. Aug 13, 2013 at 21:01
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I have found that Telerik's free Work Item Manager provides an elegant solution to this problem.

Just define your queries as you usually would but leave out any filters relating to iterations (note that this also applies to areas). There is a treeview pane named 'Area/Iteration Filters' that will add extra, recursive filtering based on the iteration (or area) that you select there.

Note that if the pane is not visible then you can enable it via the View menu.

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