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Assignment 5Printing Your PlanYou don't normally see all the data in a project plan at one time. Instead, you focus on the aspect of the plan that you're currently interested in. Views and reports are the most common ways to see or print a project plan's data. In both cases (especially with views), you can substantially format the data to meet your needs. The primary way Project represents tasks graphically is as bars on the chart portion of a Gantt Chart view. These are called Gantt bars. On a Gantt chart, tasks, summary tasks, and milestones all appear as Gantt bars, and each type of bar has its own format. Whenever you work with Gantt bars, keep in mind that they represent tasks in a project plan. Creating a Custom Gantt Chart ViewThe Gantt chart became a standard way of visualizing project plans when, in the early twentieth century, American engineer Henry Gantt developed a bar chart showing the use of resources over time. For many people, a Gantt chart is synonymous with a project plan. In Project, the default view is the Gantt Chart view. You are likely to spend a lot of your time in Project in this view. The Gantt Chart view consists of two parts: a table on the left and a timescaled bar chart on the right. The bars on the chart graphically represent the tasks in the table in terms of start and finish dates, duration, and status (for example, whether work on the task has started or not). Other elements on the chart, such as link lines, represent relationships between tasks. The Gantt chart is a popular and widely understood representation of project information throughout the project management world.
The default formatting applied to the Gantt Chart view works well for onscreen viewing, sharing with other programs, and printing. However, you can change the formatting of just about any element on the Gantt chart. In this exercise, we will focus on Gantt bars. There are three distinct ways to format Gantt bars:
In this exercise, you create a custom Gantt chart and apply predefined formatting to it with the Gantt Chart Wizard. You then preview the results for printing. 1. On the Tools menu, click Options. 2. In the Options dialog box, click the View tab. 3. Under the Outline options for..., select the Show project summary task check box, and then click OK. Project displays the project summary task at the top of the Gantt Chart view. You might see pound signs (##) in the project summary task's duration field. If so, complete steps 4 and 5. 4. Drag the vertical divider bar between the table and chart to the right until you can see the right edge of the Duration column.
5. Double-click the right edge of the Duration column, in the column heading, to expand the column so that you can see the entire value.
The Duration column widens to show the widest value in the column. In this case, that value is the duration for the project summary task. Your screen should look similar to the following illustration:
Next you will create a copy of the Gantt Chart view so that the formatting changes you make won't affect the original Gantt Chart view. 6. On the View menu, click More Views. The More Views dialog box appears, with the current view (the Gantt Chart view) selected. 7. Click the Copy button. The View Definition dialog box appears. Your screen should look similar to the following illustration:
The Name field contains the proposed name of the new view, as it will appear in the More Views dialog box and, if you specify, on the View menu. Note the ampersand (&) in the Name field. This is a code that indicates the keyboard shortcut character of the new view name, should you wish to include one. 8. In the Name field, type Custom Gantt Chart, and then click OK. The View Definition dialog box closes. The Custom Gantt Chart view appears and is selected in the More Views dialog box. Your screen should look similar to the following illustration:
9. In the More Views dialog box, click the Apply button. At this point, the Custom Gantt Chart view is an exact copy of the original Gantt Chart view, so the two views look alike. Note, however, that the view title on the left edge of the view is updated. Next you will use the Gantt Chart Wizard to format the Gantt bars and milestones in the chart portion of the Custom Gantt Chart view. 10. On the Format menu, click Gantt Chart Wizard. The welcome page of the Gantt Chart Wizard appears. Your screen should look similar to the following illustration:
11. Click Next. The next screen of the Gantt Chart Wizard appears. 12. Click the Other button, and in the drop-down list next to the Other option, click Standard: Style 4. Your screen should look similar to the following illustration:
13. This is the only selection you'll make in the Gantt Chart Wizard for now, so click the Finish button. The final page of the Gantt Chart Wizard appears. 14. Click the Format It button, and then click the Exit Wizard button. The Gantt Chart Wizard applies the Standard: Style 4 formatting to the Custom Gantt Chart view and then closes. Your screen should look similar to the following illustration:
To conclude this exercise, you will preview the Custom Gantt Chart view. What you see on the screen closely approximates what you'd see on the printed page, and you'll verify this now. 15. On the File menu, click Print Preview. 91 Project displays the Custom Gantt Chart view in the Print Preview window. You will do more work in the Print Preview window later. Your screen should look similar to the following illustration:
16. On the Print Preview toolbar, click Page Setup, select the Header tab. Type your name in the lower box of the Header dialog and click OK.
When printing in Project, you have additional options in the Print dialog box, which you can open by clicking the Print command on the File menu. For example, you can choose to print a specific date range of a timescaled view such as the Gantt Chart view, or you can print a specific page range.
Move on to assignment 6 |
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