Microsoft Project For Dummies. Cynthia Snyder Dionisio

Microsoft Project For Dummies - Cynthia Snyder Dionisio


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      3 Scroll to display the location where you want the task to appear.

      4 Click the task after which you want to insert the task.

      5 Click the top part of the Paste button, also on the Task tab.

      If you want to insert a copy of a task in a project outline, you can follow the preceding steps and click Copy rather than Cut.

      

If you’re cutting and copying only a single cell and not a whole task, click in the cell rather than clicking the task ID number.

      

You can also use the standard Microsoft shortcuts — Ctrl+C to copy, Ctrl+X to cut, and Ctrl+V to paste.

      Remember in elementary school when your teacher made you create an outline to organize your work? The outline helped you arrange content and allowed you to focus on different levels of information to keep everything organized.

      With the invention of computer outlining, the capability to focus on only certain portions of an outline comes into its own, because you can easily expand and collapse an outline to show or hide different levels of information — or entire sections of your outline. The black triangle symbol next to the Walls summary task in Figure 3-1 indicates that all subtasks below it are displayed. The clear triangle next to the Equipment summary task indicates that the subtasks aren’t displayed. Remember that all summary tasks are in bold in the project outline.

      This capability means that you can hide all but the upper level of tasks in a project to give your manager an overview of progress. Or you can collapse every phase of your project except the one in progress so that your team can focus on only those tasks in a status meeting. Or you can collapse most of your outline to make it easy to move to a late phase of a very large schedule.

      You can use the Show Subtasks command and the Hide Subtasks command at any level of summary tasks. Just select the summary task you want — regardless of whether it’s at Level 1 or Level 5 — and click Show Subtasks to see everything underneath, or click Hide Subtasks to just see the summary task.

      When you want an overview of your project, it’s helpful to look at it from Level 1 or Level 2. You can see Desert Rose Security at Level 1 in Figure 3-2. Notice the duration for each of the summary level tasks. You can see how they nest within the Project Summary Task.

Snapshot of Outline options.

      © John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      FIGURE 3-3: Outline options.

Snapshot of Level 2 outline.

      © John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      FIGURE 3-4: Level 2 outline.

To quickly reveal all subtasks in a project, click the Outline button and then click All Subtasks.

      

To show subtasks from the keyboard, you can press Alt+Shift+* (asterisk). To hide subtasks, you can press Alt+Shift+- (hyphen) or Alt+Shift+– (minus sign) if you’re using the numeric keypad.

      Some tasks occur repeatedly in projects. For example, attending a monthly project debriefing or generating a quarterly project report is considered a recurring task.

      Here’s how to create a recurring task:

      1 Click the Task tab on the Ribbon, click the bottom part of the Task button (with the down arrow) in the Insert group, and then click Recurring Task.Figure 3-5 shows the Recurring Task Information dialog box that will insert a recurring task for a monthly meeting on the 10th of every month. The meeting is scheduled to occur every month from January through July.

      2 In the Task Name box, type a name for the task.

      3 In the Duration box, click the spinner arrows to set a duration, or type a duration, such as 1d for 1 day.Edit the abbreviation to specify a different time unit, if needed. You can read about the abbreviations that you can use for units of duration — such as h for hours — in Chapter 5.

      4 Select a recurrence pattern by selecting the Daily, Weekly, Monthly, or Yearly radio button.The option you select provides different choices for the rest of the recurrence pattern.

      5 Depending on the selections offered to you, make choices for the rest of the pattern.For example, if you select the Weekly radio button, you must choose a Recur Every x Week(s) On setting and then choose a day such as Friday. Or, if you select Monthly, you must specify every two months, every three months, and so on. You also need to choose which day of the month the task is to recur.

      6 In the Range of Recurrence area, type a date in the Start box; then select and fill in either the End After or End By option.For example, you might start on January 1 and end after 12 occurrences to create a task that occurs every month for a year.

      7 Click the OK button to save the recurring task.

      If your settings cause a task to fall on a nonworking day (for example, if you choose to meet on the eighth day of every month and the eighth day is a Sunday in one of those months), a dialog box appears, asking you how to handle this situation. You can choose not to create the task, or you can let Project adjust the day to the next working day in that period.

Snapshot of the Recurring Task Information dialog box.

      © John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

      FIGURE 3-5: The Recurring Task Information dialog box.

To assign resources to a recurring task, you have to assign the resources to the individual recurrences, not to the “summary” recurring task. If you assign resources to the summary recurring task, Project doesn’t calculate the hours of work correctly. I talk about assigning resources to tasks in Chapter 9.


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