I'm afraid Microsoft Project can't give you what you want. You can get close using a two-tiered timescale with Month on the middle tier and numbered Days (of the month) on the bottom tier, but
The ~20-day offset from real dates isn't going to happen easily. Every single point on the timeline has a direct correspondence to a unique date/time value according to one of the three Calendar Types that you may select (Gregorian is default); all bars are plotted against these values.
The number of days in each month won't be 30; they will vary according to the Gregorian (or Hijiri, or Thai Buddhist) calendar that you apply.
I've encountered "timescales" similar to your description in some spreadsheets prepared by others for data entry and display. You may have to go there (i.e. Excel).
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18 years 11 monthsJagjit,I'm afraid Microsoft
Jagjit,
I'm afraid Microsoft Project can't give you what you want. You can get close using a two-tiered timescale with Month on the middle tier and numbered Days (of the month) on the bottom tier, but
I've encountered "timescales" similar to your description in some spreadsheets prepared by others for data entry and display. You may have to go there (i.e. Excel).
Good luck, tom