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From: Saviz on 13 May 2008 21:20 Hi, I have read a lot of articles about behaviour of the fixed units, duration and work and how they function. However I would appreciate any advice from someone with real life experience using any of the scheduling techniques above mentioned scheduling techniques. Cons and pros..etc and the scenario where a specific type was used. Thanks. -- Saviz
From: Rod Gill on 13 May 2008 21:43 My simple rules for easy resource assignments are: All tasks default to Effort driven off and fixed units. I find this the most flexible and requiring the least number of edits, mouse-clicks and keystrokes to get what I want. Effort driven only affects tasks when you add a second or subsequent resource to a task. Fixed units, work and duration are only important when you edit assignments. To edit an assignment, out of work, units and duration, edit one, fix one and the third one gets re-calculated. -- Rod Gill Microsoft MVP for Project Author of the only book on Project VBA, see: http://www.projectvbabook.com "Saviz" <Saviz(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:D480C156-E45B-4B43-9DE0-165802F58238(a)microsoft.com... > Hi, > > I have read a lot of articles about behaviour of the fixed units, duration > and work and how they function. > > However I would appreciate any advice from someone with real life > experience > using any of the scheduling techniques above mentioned scheduling > techniques. > > Cons and pros..etc and the scenario where a specific type was used. > > > Thanks. > > > -- > Saviz
From: "Steve House" sjhouse at hotmail dot on 16 May 2008 19:10 I don't think of those parameters as being a fixed in granite property of the task at all. They are switches that you, the scheduler, can use to insure Project does its calculations as your expertise says they "ought" to be done. I have Joe Painter assigned 100% to the task Paint the Room which has a duration of 5 days, resulting in work of 40 man-hours. I'm changing him to 50% ... why? If it's because I need him on something else at the same time and will live with the fact that painting the room will take longer, I make it Fixed Work and do my edit so it shows duration 10 days, Joe 50%, work 40 hours. But if it's because I realize that it's really a 20 man-hour task but I don't need it before Friday anyway, I'll make it Fixed Duration and do my edit so after the edit it shows duration 5 days, Joe 50%, work 20 hours. You can;t violate the prime directive W=D*U "Saviz" <Saviz(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:D480C156-E45B-4B43-9DE0-165802F58238(a)microsoft.com... > Hi, > > I have read a lot of articles about behaviour of the fixed units, duration > and work and how they function. > > However I would appreciate any advice from someone with real life > experience > using any of the scheduling techniques above mentioned scheduling > techniques. > > Cons and pros..etc and the scenario where a specific type was used. > > > Thanks. > > > -- > Saviz
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