The method Zoltan describes is equally applicable in P6 or MSP. The activity codes Zoltan describes in P6 are most similar to (though substantially more powerful than) custom flag fields in MSP. The simplest approach in MSP is to use custom flag fields, e.g. "Criticaljan" and "Criticalfeb" for marking tasks as being on the critical path at different times, with the caveat that you can fairly quickly run out of the limited flag fields available. For a longer project, you can experiment with concatenating values in text fields - more useful for filtering than for grouping.
Grouped, filtered, and sorted views in MSP have the same fundamental restrictions as activity layouts in P6: a given task/activity can only be displayed once. Thus, an activity/task that is critical in January and March must be displayed primarily in one month or the other. While nested groups can provide insite from month to month, they don't offer a time-phased view of the changes in the critical path over many months. For that, you need to export, analyze, and display the data externally, using Excel or another data reporting tool.
Hi Zoltan - this sounds like an interesting idea. When you refer to "Activity Codes" in MS Project, is this a custom Field or is it a Flag. I'll be honest, I have not come across the phrase "Activity Code" in MSP.
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16 years 3 months
Member for16 years3 months
Submitted by Zoltan Palffy on Fri, 2021-05-21 14:06
Thansk Santosh. I think I can do something similar (to what you show) in Excel but it is an additional external step I was hoping to avoid. However, Excel is very good for the presentation aspects. Thanks for your reply. Best regards.
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20 years 6 months
Member for20 years6 months
Submitted by Santosh Bhat on Thu, 2021-05-20 01:59
I don't know how it can be done in MSP natively, but thats more due to my own lack of awareness of MSP's capabilities. But the tool I've developed called Turbo-Chart is capable of presenting upto three different versions of MPP schedules displaying criticality of selected tasks in each.
Member for
18 years 11 monthsPete,The method Zoltan
Pete,
The method Zoltan describes is equally applicable in P6 or MSP. The activity codes Zoltan describes in P6 are most similar to (though substantially more powerful than) custom flag fields in MSP. The simplest approach in MSP is to use custom flag fields, e.g. "Criticaljan" and "Criticalfeb" for marking tasks as being on the critical path at different times, with the caveat that you can fairly quickly run out of the limited flag fields available. For a longer project, you can experiment with concatenating values in text fields - more useful for filtering than for grouping.
Grouped, filtered, and sorted views in MSP have the same fundamental restrictions as activity layouts in P6: a given task/activity can only be displayed once. Thus, an activity/task that is critical in January and March must be displayed primarily in one month or the other. While nested groups can provide insite from month to month, they don't offer a time-phased view of the changes in the critical path over many months. For that, you need to export, analyze, and display the data externally, using Excel or another data reporting tool.
Good luck, tom
Member for
6 years 4 monthsHi Zoltan - this sounds like
Hi Zoltan - this sounds like an interesting idea. When you refer to "Activity Codes" in MS Project, is this a custom Field or is it a Flag. I'll be honest, I have not come across the phrase "Activity Code" in MSP.
Member for
16 years 3 monthsthere are severla ways to do
there are severla ways to do this one way is each month export the activites to excel and you can compaire them there
another way is to create a activity code call it mypath and lets say for january make the value for the code criticalajan
now filter for the critical path and assign each activity on the critical path with the criticaljan code
next update February add the code value criticalfeb
now filter for the critical path and assign each activity on the critical path with the critcalfeb code
now filter where any
mypath eqauls criticaljan
or
mypath equals criticalfeb
now group my mypath
the critical activities in january will now be grouped togther and the february critical path actvities will be group together
now you have distinct seperation of the critical path activities from one moth to the other.
Member for
6 years 4 monthsThansk Santosh. I think I can
Thansk Santosh. I think I can do something similar (to what you show) in Excel but it is an additional external step I was hoping to avoid. However, Excel is very good for the presentation aspects. Thanks for your reply. Best regards.
Member for
20 years 6 monthsPete,I don't know how it can
Pete,
I don't know how it can be done in MSP natively, but thats more due to my own lack of awareness of MSP's capabilities. But the tool I've developed called Turbo-Chart is capable of presenting upto three different versions of MPP schedules displaying criticality of selected tasks in each.
This page shows an example in P6, but MSP would be similar: Preparing Gantt Charts with Turbo-Chart | Turbo-Chart
Member for
6 years 4 monthsApologies - I was not able to
Apologies - I was not able to insert the actual image that I wanted to show - here is a stock image .....
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