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101 delay
The amount of time between the scheduled start of a task and the time when work should actually begin on the task; it is often used to resolve resource overallocations. There are two types of delay: assignment delay and leveling delay. -
102 driving resource
The resource whose assignment to a task determines the finish date of the task. -
103 expected duration
"The total span of active working time expected for a task, that is, the amount of time from the expected start to the expected finish of a task." -
104 external dependency
A relationship in which the start or finish date of a task depends on a task in another project. -
105 fixed date
A date to which a task is tied either because the date was entered in the Actual Start or Actual Finish field or because the task is constrained by an inflexible constraint. -
106 free slack
The amount of time that a task can slip before it delays another task. -
107 indicator
"A graphic that provides information about the state of an assignment, resource, or task. For example, a check mark indicator shows that a task is completed." -
108 inter-project dependency
"A way to show that your project, or a specific task in your project, requires a deliverable in another project. Your project and task dates are not affected by changes to the dates in the project you are dependent upon." -
109 late finish date
"The latest date that a task can finish without delaying the finish of the project. It is based on the task's late start date, as well as the late start and late finish dates of predecessor and successor tasks, and other constraints." -
110 optimistic duration
"The best-case possibility for the total span of active working time expected for a task, that is, the amount of time from the optimistic start to optimistic finish of a task." -
111 percent complete
A field that you use to enter or display how much of a task has been completed. This value is expressed as the percentage of the task duration that has been completed. -
112 pessimistic duration
"The worst-case possibility for the total span of active working time expected for a task, that is, the amount of time from the pessimistic start to pessimistic finish of a task." -
113 outdent
To move a task to a higher outline level [to the left] in the Task Name field. -
114 remaining duration
The amount of time left to work on a task before the task is completed. This is calculated as follows: Remaining Duration = Duration - Actual Duration. -
115 report period
"The span of time during which you track and update a task that the workgroup manager has assigned to you. You can change the unit of time to days, weeks, or a single unit of time for the whole task." -
116 cross-project link
A relationship in which the start or finish date of a task depends on a task in another project. -
117 slippage
The amount of time that a task has been delayed from its original baseline plan. The slippage is the difference between the scheduled start or finish date for a task and the baseline start or finish date. -
118 status manager
A manager responsible for tracking the task updates and assignments within a project. Separate from the project manager. Each task in a project can have a different status manager. -
119 subphase
"A summary task that is nested within another summary task. With the Project outlining features, you can designate subphases." -
120 Yes/No field
"A type of field with content set to either Yes or No. For example, the Recurring field indicates whether the task is a recurring task."حقل نعم/لا
См. также в других словарях:
task — [tɑːsk ǁ tæsk] noun [countable] 1. a piece of work that must be done, especially one that must be done regularly: • Scheduling is a key task for most managers. • day to day management tasks • computers that can do dozens of tasks at the same time … Financial and business terms
Task — may refer to: Task analysis Task (project management) Task (computing), in computing, a program execution context TASK party, a series of improvisational participatory art related events organized by artist Oliver Herring Task (language… … Wikipedia
task — [task, täsk] n. [ME taske < NormFr tasque (OFr tasche) < ML tasca, for taxa, a tax < L taxare, to rate, value, TAX] 1. a piece of work assigned to or demanded of a person 2. any piece of work 3. an undertaking involving labor or… … English World dictionary
Task — Task, der; [e]s, s [engl. task = Aufgabe < mengl. taske < afrz. tasche, über das Vlat. < mlat. taxa, ↑ Taxe] (EDV): in sich geschlossene Aufgabe, dargestellt durch einen Teil eines Programms od. ein ganzes Programm. * * * Task [dt.… … Universal-Lexikon
Task — Task, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Tasked}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Tasking}.] 1. To impose a task upon; to assign a definite amount of business, labor, or duty to. [1913 Webster] There task thy maids, and exercise the loom. Dryden. [1913 Webster] 2. To oppress … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Task — (t[.a]sk), n. [OE. taske, OF. tasque, F. t[^a]che, for tasche, LL. tasca, taxa, fr. L. taxare to rate, appraise, estimate. See {Tax}, n. & v.] 1. Labor or study imposed by another, often in a definite quantity or amount. [1913 Webster] Ma task of … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
task — ► NOUN ▪ a piece of work to be done. ► VERB 1) (task with) assign (a task) to. 2) make great demands on. ● take to task Cf. ↑take to task … English terms dictionary
task — task, duty, assignment, job, stint, chore are comparable when they mean a piece of work which one is asked to do and is expected to accomplish. Task refers to a specific piece of work or service usually imposed by authority or circumstance but… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
task — task·er; task; task·mas·ter·ship; mul·ti·task; … English syllables
task — /task / (say tahsk) noun 1. a definite piece of work assigned or falling to a person; a duty. 2. any piece of work. 3. a matter of considerable labour or difficulty. 4. Obsolete a tax or impost. –verb (t) 5. to subject to severe or excessive… …
task — n the performance that is required of the subject in a psychological experiment or test and that is usu. communicated to a human subject by verbal instructions … Medical dictionary