Working with projects
A project groups related issues and gives them a shared identity: a short prefix (so every issue reads as ENG-123), a lead, a health signal, start and target dates, and a progress rollup. A workspace can hold as many projects as your plan allows. This page covers the four ways to look at a project and the workspace-wide roadmap that sits above them.
The four project views
Open any project and you get a tab row at the top — Overview, List, Board, and Sprints — that switches how you look at the same set of issues:
- Overview — the project's home: lifecycle chips, a progress bar, the description, and a live activity feed.
- List — a filterable, sortable table of issues with saved views.
- Board — a kanban board with drag-and-drop between workflow columns.
- Sprints — time-boxed iterations with their own board and completion tracking (Pro and above; free-plan projects show the tab with an upgrade prompt).
Project overview
The overview header carries the project's lifecycle at a glance — a status badge, a health dot (on track / at risk / off track), the project lead, and a start → target date range. Admins edit these inline; everyone else sees them read-only. Below the header, a progress bar rolls up every issue in the project into completed / in-progress / to-do segments, with cancelled issues excluded from the denominator and surfaced as a separate count so they stay visible without skewing the completion percentage.
The overview also shows a description you can edit inline and a recent-activity preview — the last few noteworthy events (issues created, status changes, comments, agent delegations, PR links). Agent activity is first-class here: when an agent moves an issue or opens a PR, it appears in the feed attributed to the agent, the same as a human teammate.
List view, filters, and saved views
The List view is a dense table you can filter by status, priority, assignee, sprint, labels, and assignee type (human or agent). Combine filters to answer questions like "show me every urgent issue assigned to an agent that isn't in a sprint yet."
On Pro and above, you can name a filter combination and save it as a custom view, then switch between your saved views from a dropdown and mark one as your default so it loads automatically. Saved views are scoped to you and the project — your teammates' views don't clutter yours. On the free plan the "Save view" button stays visible with a Pro badge, so you always know the feature is there.
Board view
The Board view lays issues out as cards in columns, one column per workflow status. Drag a card between columns to change its status — the move is optimistic, so the card lands instantly and rolls back with a toast if the server rejects it. Keyboard users can move cards too (Space to pick up, arrows to move, Space to drop, Escape to cancel).
Columns collapse to a thin rail when you want to focus — collapsed columns still accept drops, so you don't have to expand a column to drop a card into it. Cards surface the same signals you'd want at a glance: comment count, linked PRs, story points, due date (tinted when overdue), and — for an issue an agent is actively working — a live "Agent working" row with the current step and elapsed time.
Your workspace also has a cross-project board — reached from the workspace-level navigation rather than from inside any one project — that pulls issues from every project into one kanban, so you can triage across the whole workspace without hopping between projects. Because workflow statuses are shared across the workspace, dragging a card there works regardless of which project the issue belongs to.
Sprints
On Pro and above, organise work into sprints — time-boxed iterations with a start and end date. Assign issues to a sprint, run the sprint from its own board, and track which issues are done as the iteration progresses. Sprints are also a filter axis on the List view, so "everything in the current sprint" is one click. On the free plan the Sprints tab shows a Pro upgrade prompt rather than hiding the feature.
Roadmap view (Pro and above)
The workspace projects index — the "All projects" page — has two views of its own: Cards (the default, available on every plan) and Roadmap. The Roadmap is a Gantt-style timeline that lays your projects out by their start and target dates, so you can see what's planned, what overlaps, and where the gaps are across a 3-, 6-, or 12-month window. Click any bar to edit its dates inline; projects without dates collect in an "Undated" group at the bottom, each with inline chips to set a start date and target date right from the row. The Roadmap is a Pro feature — on the free plan the tab shows a lock and links to billing.
Next steps
- Working with issues — the fields and relationships on the cards your projects organise.
- Delegate to AI agents — assign project issues to agents and watch their activity in the project feed.
- Compare plans — see which features (custom views, sprints, roadmap) come with each tier.