MicrosoftВ® Office Project 2007 Step by Step (Step By Step (Microsoft))
- scheduling formula
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A representation of how Project calculates work, based on the duration and resource units of an assignment. The scheduling formula is Duration×Units=Work.
- scope
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The products or services to be provided by a project, and the work required to deliver it. For project planning, it’s useful to distinguish between product scope and project scope. Scope is one side of the project triangle model.
- ScreenTip
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A short description of an item on the screen, such as a toolbar, button, or bar. To see a ScreenTip, point to an item until the ScreenTip appears.
- semi-flexible constraint
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A constraint type that gives Project the flexibility to change the start and finish dates of a task within one date boundary. Start No Earlier Than (SNET), Start No Later Than (SNLT), Finish No Earlier Than (FNET), and Finish No Later Than (FNLT) are all semi-flexible constraints.
- sequence
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The chronological order in which tasks occur. A sequence is ordered from left to right in most views that include a timescale, such as the Gantt Chart view.
- sharer plan
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A project plan that is linked to a resource pool. Sharer plans use resources from a resource pool.
- shortcut menu
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A menu you display by pointing to an item on the screen and then right-clicking. Shortcut menus contain only the commands that apply to the item to which you are pointing.
- slack
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The amount of time that a task can be delayed without delaying a successor task (free slack) or the project end date (total slack). Slack is also known as float.
- sorting
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A way of ordering task or resource information in a view by the criteria you choose.
- source program
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When exchanging data between Project and another program, the program in which the data resided originally.
- SPI
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An earned value indicator; the acronym stands for Schedule Performance Index. In earned value analysis, this is the ratio of performed to scheduled work (SPI=BCWP/ BCWS).
- split
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An interruption in a task, represented in the Gantt bar as a dotted line between segments of a task. You can split a task multiple times.
- sponsor
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An individual or organization that both provides financial support and champions the project team within the larger organization.
- stakeholders
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The people or organizations that might be affected by project activities (those who “have a stake” in its success). These also include the resources working on the project as well as others (such as customers) external to the project work.
- Standard base calendar
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A base calendar included with Project designed to accommodate an 8:00 A.M.–5:00 P.M. Monday through Friday work shift.
- status date
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The date you specify (not necessarily the current date) that determines how Project calculates earned value indicators.
- successor
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A task whose start or finish is driven by another task or tasks, called predecessor tasks.
- summary task
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A task that is made up of and summarizes the subtasks below it. In Project, phases of project work are represented by summary tasks.
- SV
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An earned value indicator; the acronym stands for Schedule Variance. In earned value analysis, this is the difference between current progress and the baseline plan (SV=BCWP−BCWS).
- SV%
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The ratio of schedule variance to BCWS, expressed as a percentage (SV%=[SV/BCWS]×100). This is an earned value indicator.
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