Asta you said PowerProject does not use "necking" but displays a vertical band for each "exception" or non working period.
What if you have 20 calendars and for some weeks the combination includes every day as an exception?
Perhaps only on the main work week (or specific calendar) non-work days only and this is what you mean. Both are different as a main week work days is not as inclusive as a specific calendar.
My favorite Asta PP bar display function is the ability to display multiple bars on a single line without putting intersecting bars completely on top of another avoiding that one bar might hide others fully underneath. I find it very convenient for housing of individual homes as well as for condos.
Displaying individual bars necked for activity as well as for resource assignments is very convenient when you have complex resource assignments using multiple calendars. Bar necking I find to be better than any other method, very convenient for different calendars, especially good for different shifts where you can graphically see activity/resources bar necked by the hour/minutes, here you might graphically distinguish daytime shift from nighttime shift on a day per day basis.
There are many other uses for individual calendar necking, among the ability to display a bar showing all actual rain days necked.
If the activity start and activity finish are not the issue but the showing of a bar that is discontinuous at non-work hours/days then the issue is necking and can be controlled in most software.
Member for
21 years 8 monthsMikeAsta you said
Mike
Asta you said PowerProject does not use "necking" but displays a vertical band for each "exception" or non working period.
What if you have 20 calendars and for some weeks the combination includes every day as an exception?
Perhaps only on the main work week (or specific calendar) non-work days only and this is what you mean. Both are different as a main week work days is not as inclusive as a specific calendar.
My favorite Asta PP bar display function is the ability to display multiple bars on a single line without putting intersecting bars completely on top of another avoiding that one bar might hide others fully underneath. I find it very convenient for housing of individual homes as well as for condos.
http://www.planningplanet.com/forums/microsoft-project/532822/necking-b…
Displaying individual bars necked for activity as well as for resource assignments is very convenient when you have complex resource assignments using multiple calendars. Bar necking I find to be better than any other method, very convenient for different calendars, especially good for different shifts where you can graphically see activity/resources bar necked by the hour/minutes, here you might graphically distinguish daytime shift from nighttime shift on a day per day basis.
There are many other uses for individual calendar necking, among the ability to display a bar showing all actual rain days necked.
Rafael
Member for
19 years 10 monthsHi RafaelAsta PowerProject
Hi Rafael
Asta PowerProject does not use "necking" but displays a vertical band for each "exception" or non working period.
Each exception can be given its own unique colour combination.
These can either be displayed or not in any combination or folded out of view.
They can be displayed over the task or under it.
I once did an entire EoT analysis and acceleration claim using nothing but calendar excpeptions and work patterns.
Best regards
Mike Testro
Member for
21 years 8 monthsIf the activity start and
If the activity start and activity finish are not the issue but the showing of a bar that is discontinuous at non-work hours/days then the issue is necking and can be controlled in most software.
Member for
19 years 10 monthsHi AndrewYou can only attach
Hi Andrew
You can only attach one calendar to a task.
You can set the non working display for any one calendar but other task durations will still follow their own calendar.
One solution is to fold all non working days out of view.
Best regards
Mike Testro