analyze and predict with detailed resolution time statistics. |
Resolution Time Distribution report shows pull requests grouped by the time taken to merge or decline them. This helps you see the most frequent resolution times and analyze the code review process. The report helps you answer such questions as:
Below on the page, you'll learn:
For easier navigation, use the Table of Contents at the top-right of the page. How to view the Resolution Time Distribution reportThe Resolution Time Distribution report is available both on the workspace and repository levels. To view the Resolution Time Distribution report on a workspace level:
To view the Resolution Time Distribution report for a repository:
How to configure the Resolution Time Distribution report
How to read a Resolution Time Distribution reportThe report has all pull requests of the period ordered and divided into groups based on their resolution time. Each bar is a group of pull requests resolved (merged or declined) within a certain time span. E.g., one bar can include pull requests that took 'between 1 and 2 days' to be resolved; and another bar – pull requests with 'between 4 and 5 days' resolution time.
Bars on the left show pull requests with the shortest resolution time, and bars on the right show those with the longest resolution time. The more pull requests are associated with a bar, the higher it is. For example, below you can see the bar that includes 20 pull requests. Each of them was resolved in more than 17 hours and 8 minutes, but less than 22 hours and 50 minutes. Median and IQIThe red line shows the median – typical resolution time. It is in the "middle" of the distribution. If to put all pull requests of the period in order by their resolution time (from the shortest to the longest), the resolution time of the pull request in the middle will be the median.
E.g., if there are 5 pull requests during the period and they were resolved within 2, 4, 7, 11, 24 days accordingly, the median is the middle value - 7 days. The selected area shows the interquartile interval (IQI) - the middle 50% of all pull requests of the period. In other words, it displays where the bulk of the data values lie.
How to use it
Comparing the median to the quartile values (Q1 and Q3) shows whether data is skewed:
LegendThe legend above the chart shows:
Interquartile range (IQR) is the difference between the third quartile and the first quartile (IQR = Q3 - Q1). It tells about the range of the middle half of the resolution times in the distribution.
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Resolution Time Distribution report shows pull requests grouped by the time taken to merge or decline them. This helps you see the most frequent resolution times and analyze the code review process. The report helps you answer such questions as:
Watch a short video to get an overview of the report: Below on the page, you'll learn:
For easier navigation, use the Table of Contents at the top-right of the page. How to view the Resolution Time Distribution reportThe Resolution Time Distribution report is available both on the project and repository levels. To view the Resolution Time Distribution report:
How to configure the Resolution Time Distribution report
How to read a Resolution Time Distribution reportThe report is made up of the Resolution Time Distribution graph, and the list of pull requests. Resolution Time Distribution graphThe report has all pull requests of the period ordered and divided into groups based on their resolution time. Each bar is a group of pull requests resolved (merged or declined) within a certain time span. E.g., one bar can include pull requests that took 'between 1 and 2 days' to be resolved; and another bar – pull requests with 'between 4 and 5 days' resolution time.
Bars on the left show pull requests with the shortest resolution time, bars on the right show those with the longest resolution time. The more pull requests are associated with a bar, the higher it is. For example, below you can see the bar that includes 20 pull requests. Each of them was resolved in more than 17 hours 8 minutes, but less than 22 hours 50 minutes. Median and IQIThe red line shows the median – typical resolution time. It is in the "middle" of the distribution. If to put all pull requests of the period in order by their resolution time (from the shortest to the longest), the resolution time of the pull request in the middle will be the median.
E.g., if there are 5 pull requests during the period and they were resolved within 2, 4, 7, 11, 24 days accordingly, the median is the middle value - 7 days. The selected area shows the interquartile interval (IQI) - the middle 50% of all pull requests of the period. In other words, it displays where the bulk of the data values lie.
How to use it
Comparing the median to the quartile values (Q1 and Q3) shows whether data is skewed:
LegendThe legend above the chart shows:
Interquartile range (IQR) is the difference between the third quartile and the first quartile (IQR = Q3 - Q1). It tells about the range of the middle half of the resolution times in the distribution.
List of pull requestsBelow the chart, you can see the list of pull requests included in the report. For each pull request, you can see its' resolution time and reviewers. When you click a bar, the list gets updated and you can see pull requests that correspond to that bar. Click the blank space to go back to viewing all pull requests. |
If you'd like Awesome Graphs to include other pull requests reports, please, let us know. |