programming4us
 
Office
 

Microsoft Project 2010 : Tracking Your Project Progress - Working with Project Baselines (part 2) - Using Usage Views to Show Time-Phased Details

3/29/2015 9:10:01 PM

Using Usage Views to Show Time-Phased Details

Microsoft Project has very powerful viewing and editing functions that are enabled when you decide to use special display formats called Usage views. You can access Usage views in many ways through the Ribbon, but they are always under the View controls in the View groups on the Task, Resource, and View tabs. There are three major view types that show time-phased, sometimes also known as time-scaled, data details of resource assignments. You should become thoroughly familiar with the Usage views so that you can take advantage of several powerful features to view and edit data.

The Task Usage view displays tasks with each resource assigned within individual rows below the task. The Resource Usage view simply inverts the data, showing resources with a list of task assignments for each resource.

You can arrange the left half of a Usage view to show numerous data columns based on the Table that you select, or you can insert any combination of task and assignment columns you need. The right half of the screen shows a detailed breakdown of the assignment data, such as Work, Cost, Baseline Work, and so on. Figure 2 shows a typical layout of a Task Usage view with the Baseline Table showing the columns on the left side and time-phased details on the right.

Figure 2. The Usage views show time-phased details.

You can see tasks with assigned resources listed below each task as you inspect the left side of the screen. Each task and resource assignment row on the left side of the screen can have one or more time-phased detailed row on the right side of the display. You can right-click within the right-side data display to show more rows, and also include other hidden rows if you select the Detail Styles menu item.

Tip

You can right-click the calendar header of a Usage view to adjust the display characteristics, such as zoom factor and timescale column headers.


The time-phased data rows on the right side of the Usage view display show the internal details for each task and resource assignment. You can zoom into a level of detail that shows date and time information to 15-minute increments for each hour in each day. You can also zoom out to show data in a year-by-year rollup.

You can directly edit many time-phased data fields on the right side of the Usage view. Those fields are usually displayed with a white background. The numbers you enter are internally distributed between the task start and finish period for the selected cell according to factors such as task and resource calendars. Therefore, you need to be cautious when directly editing data in the time-phased fields.

You should also be aware that most time-phased data fields immediately roll up to the associated tasks or summary task items and might also change the column data on the left side of the Usage view. However, some time-phased fields do not immediately roll up as you alter the time-phased data. Baseline data fields are an example of data that does not immediately roll up when you change the time-phased data.

Time-phased baseline data is copied from planning data fields when you set the baseline using the Set Baseline control on the Project tab. Taking a baseline essentially performs a general copy and paste operation from planning data into the time-phased baseline rows.

Some time-phased data field, such as Cost, might be derived or calculated from other conditions such as individual resource settings. You cannot directly edit the derived fields in the time-phased fields, even though the data cells might have a white background. Those data fields are calculated by factors such as resource cost per hour, or cost per use settings.

You also need to be careful when editing Task Usage time-phased data within the task rows, generally shown with a yellow background. You can directly edit some of those time-phased data fields, such as Work. Data you enter within a task row cell will be distributed, also called rolled down, to the resources assignments for that task. This type of edit can also transfer directly to the data columns on the left side of the display.

You are encouraged to create some simple schedule examples with resource assignments that you can use to experiment with Task and Resource Usage views. Watch how edits made in the left side of the display propagate to the right side time-phased data and vice versa. Then watch what happens to time-phased data when you perform functions such as setting a baseline. You will learn a lot about how Project stores and manipulates internal data when you learn how to use the Usage views.

 
Others
 
- Microsoft Project 2010 : Tracking Your Project Progress - Working with Project Baselines (part 1) - Viewing Baselines
- Microsoft Project 2010 : Performing a Schedule Reality Check - Baselining the Schedule
- Microsoft Visio 2010 : Adding Sophistication to Your Drawings - Working with background pages and borders
- Microsoft Visio 2013 : Adding Sophistication to Your Drawings - Managing pages and page setup
- Microsoft Excel 2013 : Checking Compatibility - Check Workbook Compatibility
- Microsoft Excel 2013 : Working with Accounts - Work with Online Accounts, Add Online Services
- Microsoft Excel 2013 : Saving a Workbook to Online Services - Save a Workbook to Online Storage
- Microsoft Excel 2013 : Saving a Workbook with Different Formats - Save a Workbook with Another Format
- Microsoft Excel 2013 : Saving a Workbook (part 2) - Save an Excel 97-2003 Workbook
- Microsoft Excel 2013 : Saving a Workbook (part 1) - Save a Workbook for Excel 2013
 
 
REVIEW
 
- First look: Apple Watch

- 10 Amazing Tools You Should Be Using with Dropbox

- Sigma 24mm f/1.4 DG HSM Art

- Canon EF11-24mm f/4L USM

- Creative Sound Blaster Roar 2

- Alienware 17 - Dell's Alienware laptops

- Smartwatch : Wellograph

- Xiaomi Redmi 2
 
Popular tags
 
Video Tutorail Microsoft Access Microsoft Excel Microsoft OneNote Microsoft PowerPoint Microsoft Project Microsoft Visio Microsoft Word Active Directory Biztalk Exchange Server Microsoft LynC Server Microsoft Dynamic Sharepoint Sql Server Windows Server 2008 Windows Server 2012 Windows 7 Windows 8 Adobe Indesign Adobe Flash Professional Dreamweaver Adobe Illustrator Adobe After Effects Adobe Photoshop Adobe Fireworks Adobe Flash Catalyst Corel Painter X CorelDRAW X5 CorelDraw 10 QuarkXPress 8 windows Phone 7 windows Phone 8 BlackBerry Android Ipad Iphone iOS
 
Top 10
 
- How To Install Windows Server 2012 On VirtualBox
- How To Fix Skype High CPU And Memory Usage In Windows 8
- Add 270 Additional Cleaning Options To CCleaner With CCEnhancer
- FPPT Provides More Than 2000 Free And Attractive PowerPoint Templates
- Setup Free Media Server To Stream Videos To DLNA Compatible TV, Xbox 360 & PS3 (Play Station 3)
- How To Install Android Market & Google Apps On Kindle Fire
- How To Make Ubuntu Look Like Windows 7
- How To Add A New Account in MS Outlook 2013
- Get Android & Mac OS X Style Gadgets For Windows 7 & Windows 8 With XWidget
- How To Activate Microsoft Office 2013
<