|   Conditional Task Length     Posted: 11 Jun 2004 11:41 AM PDT It is possible, but it is a bit kludgy.Do this.
 Insert one of the number fields (number1, number2 ...)
 Insert one of the duration fields
 Let's imagine you are using Number1 and Duration1 for this example
 right click on the header of the duration1 column
 select customize.
 click on the formula button
 enter
 [Duration]*[Number1]
 click ok.
 
 Now set the value in Number1 to be .2
 
 Now copy the value in the duration1 cell
 Go to the duration cell for the other task
 From the edit menu select "Paste Special"
 Make sure that the "Paste Link" radio button is selected.
 Click OK.
 
 Now when the first task changes in duration, the second task will change as
 well.
 
 -Jack
 
 
 "Erik L" <microsoft.com> wrote in message
 news:1b39201c44fe3$b944c980$gbl...
 
 
 
 | 
    |   n/a error     Posted: 11 Jun 2004 10:02 AM PDT I have an example of how to work around this on my website:
 http://masamiki.com/project/customfieldFAQ.htm
 
 -Jack
 
 "Gérard Ducouret" <fr> wrote in message
 news:phx.gbl...
 
 
 
 | 
    |   PERT Chart Problems     Posted: 11 Jun 2004 08:01 AM PDT Have you tried Format/Layout Now?
 It would seem that you can best avoid corruption and bloat by using
 File/Save As... rather than a simple Save, as that process is supposed to
 tidy up the bits left over from editing etc.
 
 And keep saving backups :)
 
 Mike Glen
 Project MVP
 
 Ron T wrote:
 
 
 
 
 | 
    |   #error to be removed     Posted: 11 Jun 2004 07:28 AM PDT Mike is correct. There is no way to have a number field be blank. It isalways 0 or some other value.
 If you want a blank field then you must use a text field.
 
 -Jack
 
 "Mike Glen" <glenATmvps.org> wrote in message
 news:OsZsWY%phx.gbl...
 it
 
 
 
 | 
    |   How can...     Posted: 11 Jun 2004 04:40 AM PDT Thank you very much Gérard Ducouret.
 It really helped me.
 
 Have a nice day
 
 | 
    |   Scheduling - %Completes and Actuals     Posted: 10 Jun 2004 03:30 PM PDT Ivivanti,
 Click View>Task Usage (or Resource Usage) and you'll get a timescaled
 view on the right side with the tasks and resources on the left. It
 looks and functions just like a timesheet. You can enter the Actual
 Work in the appropriate spaces (on a daily or weekly basis) in the
 timescaled part on the right. (You may have to right-click in this
 section and select Actual Work if it's not visible.) This will
 automatically enter the correct Actual Start date. After you enter the
 timescaled Actual Work, adjust the Remaining Work as needed in the
 left side.
 
 Sarah
 sarah_kiko@(removethis)cinfin.com
 
 | 
    |   Deleted projects in shared resource pool     Posted: 10 Jun 2004 09:02 AM PDT Thanks for the advise.  I ended up creating a new resourcepool and am changing the sharer files individually.  Works
 OK.
 
 --Ken
 projects from it
 future, make sure you
 Failure to do so
 group.
 project.server
 and Project VBA
 message
 
 | 
    |   Unhide Column     Posted: 10 Jun 2004 01:33 AM PDT Hi ea,
 Welcome to this Microsoft Project newsgroup :-)
 
 You might like to see FAQ Item: 11. Hidden Column.
 
 FAQs, companion products and other useful Project information can be seen at
 this web address: http://www.mvps.org/project/
 
 Hope this helps - please let us know how you get on :-)
 
 Mike Glen
 Project MVP
 
 ea wrote:
 
 
 
 | 
    |   how to undo the manipulation several time     Posted: 09 Jun 2004 11:00 PM PDT No, it can't. Unfortunately, you only get one shot.
 Sarah
 
 | 
    |   Adjust_Date micro     Posted: 09 Jun 2004 11:34 AM PDT Sorry, you must have a start date in the template, or any project for thatmatter!.
 
 
 Mike Glen
 Project MVP
 
 Majid wrote:
 
 
 
 | 
    |   Linking two schedules in Project     Posted: 09 Jun 2004 07:53 AM PDT "Peggy" <microsoft.com> wrote in message
 news:com...
 change I make to one schedule is also made to the other schedule?
 
 Master Projects and Cross-Project Linking
 Using master projects to provide rolled-up reports across multiple projects
 and create external dependencies between tasks in different projects is
 valuable when using Microsoft Project Professional as stand-alone
 applications, but does not work as well when all projects are integrated
 into a common repository like the Project Server database.
 
 Note   . Master projects are not recommended to be used in Project Server,
 especially if you want to use them to provide cross-project reporting or if
 you plan on publishing assignments from the master project. Not allowing
 master projects to be published to Project Server is recommended.
 
 Because of the way projects are stored in the Project Server database and
 the way that this affects project-to-project interaction, project managers
 should avoid saving projects to the Project Server database that would
 normally be considered to be master projects in Microsoft Project
 Professional. Saving master projects and their sub-projects may cause
 double-counting of resource assignments and ultimately produce inaccurate
 Project Web Access views.
 
 Project Server provides several useful alternatives to the traditional
 master project:
 
 ·            Administrative projects - allows users to simulate traditional
 master projects in Microsoft Project Professional using projects saved and
 published to the Project Server database.
 
 An Administrative project is a project without any tasks or resources that
 have been saved or published to the Project Server database from Microsoft
 Project Professional. To create external dependencies or retain familiar
 reports, you should create local master projects on your client computer in
 Microsoft Project Professional by inserting projects checked out from the
 Project Server database. Users can then save the sub-projects (inserted
 projects) back to the Project Server database while saving the master
 project to their local computers. Using this method will allow users to work
 with master projects in a familiar way and will help maintain accurate
 enterprise project and resource data in the Project Server database
 
 ·            Enterprise Outline Codes - allows organization to add custom
 elements into cross-project reporting that traditional master projects
 cannot do as well. Using the Enterprise Global Template to define custom
 Enterprise Outline Codes can help provide better reporting results for
 project data.
 
 ·            Portfolio Analyzer - provides users with better reporting and
 data results across projects than the traditional use of master projects
 can.
 
 Microsoft Office Project 2003 has two administrative options that affect
 what project managers can take relative to master projects.
 
 ·            To allow master projects to be saved to Project Server.
 
 ·            To allow master projects to be published to Project Server
 
 
 
 1.1.1                         Cross-Project Links
 Cross-project linking enables project managers to link tasks in one project
 to tasks in another project.
 
 Microsoft Project Professional supports true cross-project linking. The user
 can include a path and filename in the Predecessor and Successor fields,
 followed by a slash and the usual relationship syntax.
 
 For example, if <>\1 Exabyte Desktop Drive.Published\24FS+3d is entered in
 the Predecessor field, then the predecessor has ID 24 in the project server
 stored project plan 1 Exabyte Desktop Drive.Published and the relationship
 is Finish-to-Start with 3 days of lag.
 
 1.1.2                         Cross-Project Linking Terminology
 The term internal is used to describe those tasks that exist in a project.
 External relates to those tasks outside of a project. Use of either of these
 terms depends on the specific project in question. To avoid confusion, this
 discussion assumes the active project is the internal project unless stated
 otherwise.
 
 When an external link is created in the active project, replicated tasks are
 created in both the external and active projects.
 
 The term ghost task is used to refer to an external (replicated) task,
 however, an external task is not displayed with the ghost task formatting in
 the active project if the parent of the external task has been inserted into
 the active project.
 
 One project gets an external successor task and the other gets an external
 predecessor task. When either project is displayed alone (for example, does
 not contain the other as an inserted project), the external task is
 displayed with special light gray ghost formatting so it can be easily
 distinguished from other tasks.
 
 If an external task is displayed as a ghost task in the active project, it
 gets its own ID in the active project (not necessarily the same ID it has in
 its parent project). A predecessor ghost task is inserted just before the
 corresponding internal successor task, and a successor ghost task is
 inserted just after the corresponding internal predecessor task. However, if
 a ghost task representing the external task already exists, then that ghost
 task is used to represent the external task in all the relationships it may
 have with tasks in the active project. In other words, if two tasks in the
 active project both have the same external predecessor, there is only one
 ghost task representing that external task in the active project.
 
 Figure 183 illustrates the relative use of the terms internal and external,
 in relation to cross-project linking.
 
 
 
 Figure 183. Internal- External task links
 
 From the perspective of 1 Exabyte Desktop Drive.Published task 55 is the
 external link.
 
 The task in each individual project that represents an external task is also
 called a ghost task.
 
 1.1.3                         Linking Between Projects
 There are two ways to link information between Microsoft Project
 Professional files: by using dependency links between project files, or by
 using object linking and embedding via Copy/Paste Special.
 
 When a project relies on a task that is in another project, cross-project
 links can be used to create a dependency between them. When a dependency
 between tasks in different projects is created in this way, any changes to
 the start or finish dates of the external task are automatically reflected
 in the successor task of the other project.
 
 When links between only certain fields of information need to be created,
 links between fields in two project files can be pasted by using the Paste
 Special command instead. For example, where the same job descriptions and
 pay rates exist in two projects, but the tasks occur in both projects, the
 Paste Special command enables the user to connect the selected fields in the
 two plans so that the information stays synchronized.
 
 1.1.3.1                    To Create a Dependency Between Tasks in Different
 Projects
 1.   Open both projects - the file containing the task you want to link to
 and the file containing the task you want to link from. (If necessary, you
 can search for your file.)
 
 2.   In the Window menu, click Arrange All.
 
 3.   Use the mouse to drag a link between two tasks.
 
 or
 
 4.   In the Task Name field, click the task for which you want to create a
 task dependency to an external predecessor.
 
 5.   Click Task Information and then click the Predecessors tab.
 
 
 
 Figure 184. Creating cross project task dependency
 
 1.   In the ID field, type the full path of the project location, the
 project name, and ID number of the external predecessor, separated by a
 backslash, for example: <>\Project1.published\1 for Task ID 1 in a project
 plan stored as Project 1 (Figure 184).
 
 2.   To change the dependency to a type other than finish-to-start, select a
 different dependency type in the Type field.
 
 3.   To enter lag time for the dependency, enter a value in the Lag field.
 
 4.   To enter lead time, enter a negative value in the Lag field, such as -2
 for two days of lead time.
 
 1.1.3.2                    Task Dependency Dialog Box
 The Task Dependency dialog box is displayed by double-clicking a link line
 in a consolidated or stand-alone project.
 
 There are two versions of the Task Dependency dialog box, one version if the
 link does not involve a ghost task (but may involve inserted external
 tasks), and a different version for a link between an internal task and a
 ghost task.
 
 To display a Task Dependency dialog box, double-click a link line between
 two tasks that are not ghosted (Figure 185).
 
 
 
 Figure 185. Link between two internal tasks
 
 For a link between an internal task and a ghost task, the full path and
 filename of the ghost task are appended in parentheses after the ghost task
 name (Figure 186).
 
 
 
 Figure 186. Link from a ghost task to an internal task
 
 1.1.4                         Editing Ghost Tasks
 If a cell of a ghost task is double-clicked, Microsoft Project Professional
 opens the external project, if it is not already open, and places the cursor
 at the top of the file. If the file is already open, double clicking the
 ghost task will activate that file and place the cursor at the proper task.
 
 The cross project link can be edited in either project.
 
 The ghost task can be deleted from the internal task's project. This removes
 the link and removes the ghost task from the internal project. This action
 has no affect on the external task in the external project except to remove
 the cross-project link (and the appropriate ghost task) when that project is
 updated. For example, deleting a ghost task breaks the link, but does not
 delete the task record from the parent project.
 
 1.1.4.1                    Synchronized and Editable Ghost Fields
 Some information in a ghost task is synchronized with the information in the
 external project, and some information is editable in the internal project.
 In general most fields are synchronized except for custom fields, notes, and
 baseline fields (so that the user can set a baseline in the internal
 project) and some fields are only used to show assignment fields.
 
 Cost and work fields are synchronized, but they are not included in rollup
 calculations because they are not counted against the internal project.
 Also, fields that are synchronized are not editable because the
 synchronization would wipe out any edits.
 
 The following split table shows what information is synchronized with the
 information in the external project. It also shows what information can be
 edited in the internal project. The X at the end of some of the field names
 in the table is a placeholder for numbered fields. For example, TextX means
 Text1, Text2, and so on.
 
 
 
 Name
 Sync
 Editable
 
 Name
 Sync
 Editable
 
 Actual Cost
 Yes
 No
 
 Marked
 No
 Yes
 
 Actual Duration
 Yes
 No
 
 Milestone
 Yes
 No
 
 Actual Finish
 Yes
 No
 
 Name
 Yes
 No
 
 Actual Overtime Cost
 Yes
 No
 
 Notes
 No
 Yes
 
 Actual Overtime Work
 Yes
 No
 
 NumberX
 No
 Yes
 
 Actual Start
 Yes
 No
 
 Objects
 No
 No
 
 Actual Work
 Yes
 No
 
 Outline Level
 No
 No
 
 Baseline Cost
 No
 Yes
 
 Overallocated
 No
 No
 
 Baseline Duration
 No
 Yes
 
 Overtime Cost
 Yes
 No
 
 Baseline Finish
 No
 Yes
 
 Overtime Work
 Yes
 No
 
 Baseline Start
 No
 Yes
 
 % Complete
 Yes
 No
 
 Baseline Work
 No
 Yes
 
 % Work Complete
 Yes
 No
 
 BCWP
 No
 No
 
 Predecessors
 No
 No
 
 BCWS
 No
 No
 
 Preleveled Finish
 Yes
 No
 
 Confirmed
 No
 No
 
 Preleveled Start
 Yes
 No
 
 Constraint Date
 Yes
 No
 
 Priority
 Yes
 No
 
 Constraint Type
 Yes
 No
 
 Project
 Yes
 No
 
 Contact
 No
 Yes
 
 Recurring
 No
 No
 
 Cost
 Yes
 No
 
 Regular Work
 Yes
 No
 
 Cost Rate Table
 No
 No
 
 Remaining Cost
 Yes
 No
 
 Cost Variance
 No
 No
 
 Remaining Duration
 Yes
 No
 
 CostX
 No
 Yes
 
 Remaining Overtime Cost
 Yes
 No
 
 Created
 No
 No
 
 Remaining Overtime Work
 Yes
 No
 
 Critical
 Yes
 No
 
 Remaining Work
 Yes
 No
 
 CV
 No
 No
 
 Resource Group
 No
 No
 
 DateX
 No
 Yes
 
 Resource Initials
 No
 No
 
 Assignment Delay
 No
 No
 
 Resource Names
 No
 No
 
 Duration
 Yes
 No
 
 Resource Phonetics
 No
 No
 
 DurationX
 No
 Yes
 
 Resume
 Yes
 No
 
 Early Finish
 Yes
 No
 
 Rollup
 No
 Yes
 
 Early Start
 Yes
 No
 
 Start
 Yes
 No
 
 Effort Driven
 Yes
 No
 
 Start Variance
 No
 No
 
 External Project Name
 No
 No
 
 StartX
 No
 Yes
 
 Finish
 Yes
 No
 
 Stop
 Yes
 No
 
 Finish Variance
 No
 No
 
 Subproject File
 No
 No
 
 FinishX
 No
 Yes
 
 Subproject Read-Only
 No
 No
 
 Fixed Cost
 Yes
 No
 
 Successors
 No
 No
 
 Fixed Cost Accrual
 Yes
 No
 
 Summary
 No
 No
 
 FlagX
 No
 Yes
 
 SV
 Yes
 No
 
 Free Slack
 Yes
 No
 
 TeamStatus Pending
 No
 No
 
 Hide Bar
 No
 Yes
 
 TextX
 No
 Yes
 
 Hyperlink
 No
 Yes
 
 Total Slack
 Yes
 No
 
 Hyperlink Address
 No
 Yes
 
 Type
 Yes
 No
 
 Hyperlink Href
 No
 Yes
 
 Unique ID
 No
 No
 
 Hyperlink SubAddress
 No
 Yes
 
 Predecessors Unique ID
 No
 No
 
 ID
 No
 No
 
 Unique ID Successors
 No
 No
 
 Indicators
 No
 No
 
 Assignment Units
 No
 No
 
 Late Finish
 Yes
 No
 
 Update Needed
 No
 No
 
 Late Start
 Yes
 No
 
 WBS
 Yes
 No
 
 Level Assignments
 No
 No
 
 Work
 Yes
 No
 
 Leveling Can Split
 No
 No
 
 Work Contour
 No
 No
 
 Leveling Delay
 Yes
 No
 
 Work Variance
 No
 No
 
 Linked Fields
 No
 No
 
 
 
 
 
 
 1.1.4.2                    Formatting Ghost Tasks
 To allow formatting of the ghost tasks, the following items are included in
 the following dialog boxes:
 
 
 
 View
 Dialog box
 Item
 Default formatting
 
 Calendar
 Text Styles
 external task
 Color: Gray
 
 Calendar
 Bar Styles
 external task
 Color: GrayBar Type: BarPattern: Hollow
 
 Gantt
 Text Styles
 external task
 Color: Gray
 
 Gantt
 Bar Styles
 External (Show For)
 Color: GrayBar: Light Dither
 
 Network Diagram
 Text Styles
 external task
 Color: Gray
 
 Network Diagram
 Box Styles
 external task
 Color: GrayBox: Dotted Box
 
 Task Sheet
 Text Styles
 external task
 Color: Gray
 
 Task Usage
 Text Styles
 external task
 Color: Gray
 
 Task Report
 Text
 external task
 Color: Gray
 
 Crosstab Report
 Text
 external task
 Color: Gray
 
 
 1.1.4.3                    Gantt Chart Wizard
 The Gantt Chart Wizard - see The Gantt Chart Wizard page 431 - preserves
 ghost task formatting, but provides no options to change it. Formatting for
 ghost task bars must be carried out using the Format Bar or Format Bar
 Styles menu commands.
 
 1.1.5                         Baseline Information for Ghost Tasks
 Unlike all other information about the ghost task, the baseline information
 comes from the internal project rather than the external project.
 
 An external task has two independent sets of baseline field values. One set
 is in its parent project, and the other set is in the internal project. This
 allows the user to see how much the ghost task has moved or changed from the
 last time the internal project baseline was set.
 
 1.1.6                         Cross Project Linking Options
 The View tab of the Options dialog box available in the Tools menu contains
 options to control how links are updated when files are opened, as well as
 whether or not ghost tasks are displayed .(Figure 187).
 
 
 
 Figure 187. Cross-Project Linking Options in Tools Options View tab
 
 The first two settings, Show external successors and Show external
 predecessors, determine if the ghost predecessors or successors are
 displayed as tasks or hidden in the current project. This setting does not
 impact the predecessor or successor fields of the linked internal task that
 show the external links as text.
 
 If the parent project of an external task is inserted into the active
 project, then the external task is not displayed as a ghost task, but is
 instead displayed as any other task in an inserted project.
 
 If the Show Links Between Projects dialog box on open option is ON
 (selected) then the Automatically accept new external data option is
 disabled and unchecked. If Show Links Between Projects dialog box on open is
 OFF (not selected), then the Automatically accept new external data option
 is enabled and this option can be turned ON or OFF.
 
 If the Show Links Between Projects dialog box on open setting is ON, then
 Microsoft Project Professional displays the Links between Projects dialog
 box whenever the file is opened, but only if there has been a change to an
 external task or link. If this setting is OFF, then Microsoft Project
 Professional does not display the dialog box on file open even if there have
 been changes to the external tasks or links. In that case, choose the Links
 between Projects command from the Tools menu to display the dialog box.
 
 If Automatically accept new external data is ON, then Microsoft Project
 Professional automatically accepts any new external link information without
 prompting the user. Because it automatically synchronizes the data, if
 Microsoft Project Professional cannot find the external link (because the
 link was removed or the project file was moved), then the external task is
 deleted.
 
 By default, the first three checkboxes are ON.
 
 These options are saved per project and cannot be saved globally.
 
 1.1.6.1                    Behavior on Open
 Suppose there is a link between a task in project Test1 and a task in
 project Test2, and project Test2 is opened. Various scenarios are discussed
 as follows.
 
 ·            If project Test1 is already open in memory, then the linked
 task in project Test2 reflects the current information from project Test1,
 and Test2's ghost in project Test1 reflects the current task data of that
 task in project Test2.
 
 Provided calculation is ON, any open project reflects the current data of
 the external tasks and links.
 
 ·            If project Test1 is not currently open, then Microsoft Project
 Professional looks for the external data in the external project (which
 would cause the project to be loaded in the background). If this external
 data is different than the current data stored in the first project being
 opened (project Test2) then Microsoft Project Professional displays the
 Cross-Project Links dialog box that shows all external links. Those links
 that have changed can be easily found by looking in the Differences column.
 
 When opening the project, it looks for the external data in the external
 project. Any changed data automatically is updated in the current project
 without prompting from the user.
 
 When opening the project, it does not look for the external data. If the
 Links Between Projects dialog box is displayed, at that point it looks for
 the external data.
 
 The Tools menu, Links Between Projects command is used to see the
 cross-project links.
 
 
 
 Figure 188. Links Between Projects dialog box
 
 The Links Between Projects dialog box (Figure 188) displays all the
 cross-project predecessors and successors for the current project with
 information about what changed in the current project. This dialog box also
 shows links whose source project cannot be found, or whose source task
 cannot be found.
 
 From this dialog box it is possible to repair broken links, choose to accept
 or refuse new data concerning a cross project link, and edit or delete a
 cross-project link (and thus the ghost task as well).
 
 When the dialog box is displayed, if it hasn't already retrieved the
 external information, it opens up all the external projects in order to
 obtain this external information.
 
 The dialog box has one tab that shows the External Predecessor tasks and
 another that shows the External Successor tasks.
 
 If an internal task has a predecessor and successor external link, then that
 task appears on both tabs.
 
 ·            Task. Shows the internal and ghost task pair that constitutes a
 cross-project link. The internal tasks are aligned to the left and have an
 ID number. The ghost task is indented under it. On the same line as the
 ghost task is Type, Date, % Complete and Difference information. The name,
 type, date and % Complete fields reflect the old information for example,
 the information stored in the current project. The differences field is used
 to inform the user what data has changed in the external project and its new
 value. The current project's internal data on the external task and
 cross-project link changes to this new value when the user accepts the
 change.
 
 ·            Type. Shows the link type and any lag or lead information about
 the external link.
 
 ·            Date. Either the start date or the finish date of the external
 task. If the link is connected to the start date of the external task, then
 the date is start date. If the link is connected to the finish date of the
 external task then the date is the finish date of the external task. It uses
 the date format selected in the Internal project.
 
 ·            %Comp. Shows the % Complete value for the external task.
 
 ·            Differences. Provides information about what has changed in the
 external task from the external project since it was last updated in the
 internal project, or it lets the user know that the external task or project
 file could not be found. If more than one piece of information changed, then
 the changes are listed on separate lines.
 
 Kinds of information displayed in the Differences column:
 
 o        Name to <new name> is displayed when the task name changed.
 
 o           Finish to <new finish> is displayed when the finish date changed
 and the link depends on the finish date.
 
 o           Start to <new start> is displayed when the start date changed to
 a new date X and the link depends on the start date.
 
 o           Type to <new type> is displayed when the link type changed.
 
 o           Link Deleted is displayed when Microsoft Project Professional
 detects that the link is deleted from the other project.
 
 o           Task Not Found is displayed when Microsoft Project Professional
 cannot find the external task within the external project.
 
 o           Project Not Found is displayed when Microsoft Project
 Professional can find the project file or DSN but not the project name
 specified. The user can use the Browse dialog box to find a renamed or moved
 project.
 
 o           File Not Found is displayed when it cannot find the project file
 or DSN. The user can use the Browse dialog box to find a moved or renamed
 external project file.
 
 o           File Located is displayed when a File Not Found or Project Not
 Found condition has been manually corrected. Note that if there are any
 changes in the file that it finds, it automatically accepts them.
 
 o           None is displayed to indicate that no changes have been made to
 the external task or link.
 
 The Accept button accepts all the changed information for the selected task.
 
 The All button accepts the changed information for all links in the dialog
 box.
 
 The Browse button lets the user repair the path for an external project file
 that may have been moved or renamed.
 
 The Delete Link button deletes the selected cross-project link and removes
 the external task from the current project.
 
 1.1.6.2                    Deleting External Links
 In Microsoft Project Professional, it is possible to delete external
 predecessor links to files that cannot be found. The dialog box shown in
 Figure 188 will appear enabling the user to delete the external link or
 relocate the file.
 
 1.1.6.3                    Project Calculations
 No project is recalculated unless it is opened.
 
 Suppose that project A has links to project B and B has links back into A,
 and only project B is opened. Microsoft Project Professional reads in dates
 from project A (provided the user says it's ok to update links). Microsoft
 Project Professional does not recalculate tasks in project A, even though
 their predecessors in project B may have changed.
 
 All the appropriate projects must be reopened before everything can be
 recalculated.
 
 1.1.6.4                    Circular Loop Detection
 The definition of a circular loop or circular task relationship in Microsoft
 Project Professional is when a series of task links, link back to the first
 task in the series. Circular links are not allowed in Microsoft Project
 Professional as they will cause Microsoft Project Professional to stop
 calculating field values and therefore must be avoided.
 
 If the user tries to create a circular link loop in a single project,
 Microsoft Project Professional can detect this condition and does not allow
 the link to be created. This is more difficult to detect and solve when the
 links are spread among a number of different projects.
 
 It is possible to create such loops by creating links while not having all
 the projects open. For example, assume that x, y and z represent single
 tasks in projects A, B and C. If x is linked to y and y is linked to z, and
 then B is closed, and link z is linked to x, a circular link is created.
 
 x -> y -> z -> x
 
 Microsoft Project Professional only detects such loops among currently
 opened projects.
 
 
 
 
 
 | 
    |   Baseline date     Posted: 09 Jun 2004 07:32 AM PDT Oren,
 I don't have Project 2003 server but I doubt it will give the
 information you want particularly if you are updating the same baseline.
 Since Project 2003 has multiple baselines, I suggest you save each
 update as a separate baseline, then you will have each date saved.
 
 If you need more than 10 baselines, I suggest you either set up a custom
 field to track baseline dates either manually or automated with a macro,
 or perhaps use an Excel spreadsheet to track the baseline date data.
 
 Hope this helps.
 John
 
 | 
    |   Percent Work Complete     Posted: 08 Jun 2004 09:13 AM PDT Hi Julie,
 Notwithstanding Gerard's answer. % Complete refers to the DURATION of a task. % Work Complete refers to the WORK (hours assigned via resources). Example: A task of 5 days DURATION might contain 40 hours of WORK. For most practical purposes, those hours would be approtioned equally across all 5 days (ie, 8 hrs/day). If at the end of day 1, the resource has only done 4 hrs WORK, then your % Complete is 1/5 days = 20%, and your % Work Complete is 4/40 = 10%. If on day 2, your resource still only does 6 hrs work (lazy git!!), then your % Complete is 2/5 days = 40%, and your % Work Complete is (4+6)/40 = 25%. At the end of day 2, your analysis would read: 40% of the DURATION has elapsed, but only 25% of the WORK has been done. Someone has few long days ahead of them if they want to finish the task on time!!
 
 You do have to be a bit wary, though, owing to the fact that your % Complete does change as you extend or shorten the duraton of the task, and it is also dependent upon your Task Type. Moreover, when amending the task duration, the WORK that you have assigned to that task might also change, depending upon HOW you amend the task duration, in conjunction with the Task Type.
 
 Hope this helps.
 
 James.
 
 "Julie" wrote:
 
 
 |