baseline
This term evokes the image of a steady, horizontal line from which all deviations are measured. It carries a connotation of stability and objectivity, serving as the anchor for scientific, technical, or athletic evaluation. In professional contexts, it implies a necessary prerequisite or a non-negotiable minimum standard. In software engineering and project management, the word takes on a more rigid meaning, referring to a frozen version of a project. This prevents "scope creep" by ensuring that every change is measured against a formally approved and locked state.
Meanings
A minimum or starting point used for comparison to measure change or progress.
"The researchers established a baseline of patient health before starting the clinical trial."
The line at each end of a tennis or badminton court, marking the boundary of the playing area.
"The player stood just behind the baseline to prepare for the serve."
A fundamental set of principles or a minimum standard that must be met.
"The company's baseline requirements for new hires include a bachelor's degree and three years of experience."
In computing and software engineering, a specification or product that has been formally reviewed and agreed upon, which thereafter serves as the basis for further development.
"The team locked the baseline for version 1.0 to ensure all subsequent patches were tracked against a stable build."