Hmm, that's really interesting. An approach I hadn't considered at all. I'm going to play with that and see if the performance is better than the recursive code I already have in place.
Many thanks;
Brad.
I'm well aware of using the 'memberOf' attribute for a user to determine what groups the user is *directly* a member of. But I want to consider "parents" of groups as well.
Consider the following. I have user "Fred", who is a member of "GroupB". So Fred's 'memberOf' will include GroupB and all...
You're right. In my original example, absolutely nothing I did would cause the two tasks to appear after one another unless I set a predecessor. It's almost as though it ignored the resource allocations.
I think though, my problem stems from the order in which I created the project. I tried...
Thanks, they are all indeed set to ASAP.
As I read through various tutorial pages for Project (I'm a humble software architect, with no PM training), everything I see always sets predecessors for every task, and without it, the leveling is just a little wacky. In some places it just works, and...
I'm a total newbie when it comes to MSProject. I'm just trying to set up a *very* simple task plan for three resources. I'll explain the problem in the simplest test case:
I make two tasks (say "Task A" and "Task B"). For each, I set a duration of 5 days, and for both I set the resource to...
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