To view that part of the gantt chart showing the cut over period with hourly granularity it is possible to simply “zoom in” until hours start appearing in the timescale, or to adjust the timescale by doing a right-click on it, then select “Timescale…” to open up the timescale dialog. a task’s start date also including hours and even minutes. and allows to specify timestamps for e.g.has all the flexibility you need to adjust the timescale of your gantt chart.There is no need to deal with that complexity since MS Project Maintaining two plans for one project could easily become a nightmare, at least would be hard to handle, even MS Project does allow to combine multiple plans or to have one resource pool for mutiple plans. My recommendation was to not start with two plans. His question was: can this be done with one plan in MS Project or should he better use two plans – an extra one for the cut over period ? Someone asked me these days how he can plan the critical cut over phase of his project when he has to go down to an hourly granularity and specify tasks which need to start on a specific hour of the day and which might take only a few hours, while the rest of the project is planned on a daily base as usual.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |