Phoenix Project Manager User Manual 2012-01-03
Phoenix Project Manager User Manual 2012-01-03
0 User Manual
Contents
• Introduction
o Requirements
o Support
• Using Phoenix Project Manager
o Network Diagram View
o Barchart View
o Menu Overview
o Using the Toolbar
o Dockable Tool Windows
Activity Code Editor
Activity Editor
Predecessor/Successor Editor
Task Notes Editor
Resource Assignments Editor
Resource Utilization Graph
• Basic Tasks
o Creating a New Project
o Setting up Activity Codes
o Setting up Calendars
o Filtering Activities
o Running Reports
• Layouts and Formatting
o Layout Manager
o Activity Editor Options
o Timescale
o Columns
o Bars
o Sightlines
o Organization
o Dates
o Critical Path
• Advanced Features
o Importing
o Exporting
o Storepoints
o Comparisons
o CPM Checker
o Setting up Resources
• Appendix
o Changes
Requirements
Windows
• Microsoft Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP
Home/Professional/Tablet PC Edition, or Windows 2000
• Intel Celeron/Pentium, AMD K6/Duron/Athlon, or compatible processor
(800MHz recommended)
• 512 megabytes (MB) of RAM for Windows 2000/XP, 1 GB for Windows
Vista/7
• 30 MB of available hard disk space
• 1024x768 monitor resolution
• Internet or phone connection required for product activation
Mac OS X
• Mac OS X version 10.4 (Tiger) or later
• PowerPC G4/G5, or Intel Core Duo processor
• 512 megabytes (MB) of RAM
• 40 MB of available hard-disk space
• 1024x768 monitor resolution
• Internet or phone connection required for product activation
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Support
You can email us at [email protected] with any problems or questions you may
have regarding Phoenix Project Manager.
Back to Contents
Using Phoenix Project Manager
Phoenix Project Manager has two main views to create or edit your schedules: Barchart, and
Network Diagram. You may already be familiar with the Barchart (or Gantt Chart) view from
other popular project management software that lays out one activity for every line giving
details of all activities in a table on the left side. On the right, Barchart shows the flow of the
schedule with relationships on a timeline. The Network Diagram view, exclusive to Phoenix
Project Manager, introduces a new way to create schedules influenced by the Arrow
Diagram Method (ADM). You can create or edit your schedules in both views, however, you
will only be able to assign network line numbers in the Network Diagram view.
Tip: You can quickly switch between Barchart and Network Diagram views by pressing
Ctrl+B for Barchart and Ctrl+D for Network Diagram.
Both views make use of a timescale at the top of the screen. Changing the scale of the
timescale is as easy as clicking and dragging anywhere in the timescale. Dragging to the left
side of the timescale will shrink the timescale while dragging to the right will enlarge it. You
can customize the look and units shown from the Timescale Format window found from
the Format menu. You can also access the Format Timescale Dialog by double-clicking or
right-clicking anywhere in the timescale.
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Network Diagram
While in this view, activities can
be assigned to the same
horizontal line as other activities
allowing you to create an easier
to read, smaller, condensed
overall view of the schedule at
the cost of less detail.
Relationships in this view have
been optimized to avoid conflicts
and hidden relationships (with
exception to activities that share nodes in effect showing an implied relationship). Network
Diagram also has the ability to group activities by activity code.
Any new project you create will start you out in the Network Diagram view. We recommend
you use this view to create all your initial activities using the Draw Activity tool from
the toolbar (while adding descriptions), setup your activity codes from the Code Library,
assign your codes to your activities using the Activity Code Editor, then switch over to
Barchart view to fine tune durations and other activity details.
Network Diagram View Modes
There are four modes of operation while in Network Diagram view: Edit , Draw
Activity , Draw Text , and Draw Image . Switching between these modes from
the toolbar changes what actions are taken while using the mouse.
Edit Mode
This is the default mode that is used for most operations including selecting activities,
moving activities to different line numbers, changing activity dates, creating relationships,
or editing activity descriptions and durations.
Just like Barchart view, you can click and drag the start or finish node of any activity to
change its date. If you drag up or down off of the network line that activity is assigned to,
Phoenix will switch into relate mode allowing you to create relationships between that
activity and another one on another network line. Holding down Shift while dragging will
prevent jumping into relate mode when you drag outside of the network line the activity is
assigned to making it easier to change that activity's start or finish. Holding down Ctrl will
do the opposite and force relate mode in case you want to create a relationship to another
activity on the same network line. If you want to create a relationship to an activity that's
not in view, you can either drag outside of the window to force the window to scroll to that
activity, or just release the mouse anywhere in the window (except on another activity's
start or finish) and the manual relationship assignment window will prompt for an activity to
relate to from a list.
Selecting activities can be done by either dragging a selection box around the activities you
want to select (make sure to capture the entire activity from start to finish within the box to
select it), or you can hold down Ctrl while clicking a single activity to add it to your current
selection. Holding down Ctrl while dragging a selection box will add any activities in the box
to your current selection if they weren't previously in the selection, and deselect any
activities that had already been selected.
While you can click and drag the duration bar of any activity up or down to change its
assigned network line, you also have the ability to drag multiple activities at the same time
as well. Simply select the group of activities you want to move, and drag the duration bar of
any selected activity to move them all at once. The "ghosted" activities will show what lines
the selected activities will be assigned to while your dragging. If you drag the selection from
the bottom activity up to the first network line, all activities will be collapsed onto the first
line. If you have activity codes assigned and shown, you can click and drag any activity
code heading text to move all activities in that activity code to a different line without
selecting them all first.
Tip: Network line assignments are saved off in your current layout. Create your main
overall layout including all activities first, save your layout, then copy that layout to avoid
extra work assigning network lines.
Even without the Activity Editor shown, you can still edit activity descriptions by double-
clicking just above the duration bar on any activity in between the start and finish nodes
(where the current description is shown if there is one). Your mouse cursor will change to a
pointer with a "T" next to it to indicate where you can double-click to edit. You can do the
same with activity durations shown just under the duration bar.
Draw Activity Mode
As the name might suggest, this mode gives you the ability to draw activities anywhere in
the Network Diagram. The start date of your new activity will be where you first start
dragging the mouse with the left mouse button, and the finish date will be where you let go
of the left mouse button. If you start dragging from the finish or start of another activity, a
new relationship will be created to the start of your new activity from the start or finish of
that activity, respectively. Clicking without dragging creates a new zero duration Start
Milestone activity.
This mode lets you add text labels anywhere in the Network Diagram. They can be used for
anything, but mostly come in handy if you don't want all of the labels in a specific activity
code to show, or want them in a different position (in which case you can just turn off that
activity code, and manually add text labels). Clicking anywhere in the Network Diagram will
create a new text label tied to the date and network line you click closest to and pop up a
text editor window that lets you change the text and font. You can select any existing text
label by clicking on it while in Draw Text mode to edit or delete it. When editing multiple
text labels, it may come in handy to click and drag the text editor window's title bar to dock
it on any side of the main window.
Selecting this mode allows you to import any graphics you desire into your Network
Diagram. Once an image is imported, you can resize the image using the sizers on each
corner of it as well as move it to a desired location in the Network Diagram by simply
clicking and dragging the image. When this mode is selected you can also adjust the size or
position of other imported images by first clicking on the image to select it and then
adjusting it as desired.
Lines
The optimal lines for activities to appear on can be chosen automatically so in order to have
a clean Network Diagram it's recommended that you manually move activities to where they
fit in best with the schedule as a whole. Phoenix provides a couple tools to assist you with
this process.
The quickest way to get your Network Diagram in order relies on your schedule already
having activity codes applied to your schedule to give it an overall organization. First you'll
want to make sure your organization settings are set the way you want your activities
organized by opening up the Organization Format window from the Format Menu and
ordering the codes according to the levels you want to organize by first. With no activities
selected right-click anywhere in the Network Diagram and select "Group by Activity
Codes". This will attempt group the activities together by their code hierarchy and compact
them to as few lines as possible. If you have activities selected the "Group Selected by
Activity Codes" option will perform this operation on a subset of activities if you don't
want to reorganize the entire schedule.
After that is done, you can go into finer detail on each group of activities re-arranging them.
A good Network Diagram layout will collapse activities in a single relationship chain to save
space and show that those activities all depend on the activities before them. In some
cases, collapsing all activities on the critical path can make it easier to see how the critical
path can affect the rest of the schedule and may point out areas where the schedule can be
improved. When you find groups of activities that can be collapsed, rather than dragging
each activity to the same line, you can select all of the activities you want to collapse, right-
click, and select "Collapse Network Lines". This will move the selected activities to the
first line you have a selected activity on. You can then drag the selected activities to
another line all at once.
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Barchart
This view
gives you a
much more
detailed
view of the
schedule
than
Network
Diagram
when you
need to
perform
mass edits
on groups
of activities, or update the schedule. It is also the only view that you can setup Comparisons
in. The left side of the screen shows the Activity List which lists every activity (that isn't
filtered) and its details in a table. You can configure the Activity List to show just about any
detail of every activity as well as how it organizes them by activity codes. The right side of
the screen contains all of the activities from the Activity List shown on a timescale optionally
showing their relationships with other (non-filtered) activities.
Using the Activity List
The Activity List has the ability to do more than just display activity information in a table, it
makes editing details of multiple activities easier through the use of Fill Cell and integration
with the Activity Editor. It also has all the same activity selection capabilities as Barchart
and Network Diagram views.
Anytime you have activities selected while in Barchart view, you always have one "focused"
activity in your selection (in the case of only one activity selected, the selected activity is
the focused activity). The focused activity is usually (but not always) the first activity you
selected from the group. You can determine which activity is the focused activity by looking
for the activity with thicker double border around one of the cells in the Activity List of that
activity. In the example below, activity 1030 (Install Electrical Conduit) is the focused
activity. The cell with the double border (original duration in the example) is the focused
cell.
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Menu Overview
File
Pulls up the New Project Dialog for starting a new project. This will not close any projects
Ctrl+N New you currently have open.
Ctrl+O Open Opens any existing Phoenix Project Manager project.
Close Closes the active project.
Saves the active open project. This is only available if you've chosen a file to save your
project to (using "Save As..." in the File menu), or previously opened the project from a
Ctrl+S Save saved file and you've made changes to the project.
Saves your open project as a new file (or overwrites an existing file under a different
Save As name).
Save As Prints your open project to a PDF document. This will print the Barchart if you are in
PDF Barchart view, and the Network Diagram if you are in Network Diagram view.
Project
Info Edit your general project information.
Page
Setup Setup printer, page size, margins, and orientation.
Print
Preview Preview the project printout with your current printer and page layout settings.
Page Setup page layout settings such as date ranges, horizontal page count, and footer
Layout information.
Prints your project using your current Page Layout settings. This will print the Barchart if
Ctrl+P Print you are in Barchart view, and the Network Diagram if you are in Network Diagram view.
Reverts the last change you made to the schedule. This will not undo changes to
Ctrl+Z Undo the layout or view options except network line assignments.
Ctrl+Y Redo Repeats the last change that was reverted.
Ctrl+X Cut Copies all selected activities to the clipboard, then deletes them from the project.
Ctrl+C Copy Copies all selected activities to the clipboard.
Copies all activities on the clipboard to the project. This will pull up the Paste
Ctrl+V Paste Dialog with options for activity Id renaming and other copy options.
Delete Delete Deletes all currently selected activities.
Takes the focused Activity List column value for the focused activity, and sets
all other selected activities to the same value. This only works with certain
Ctrl+E Fill Cell columns such as description, duration, dates, and budget amounts.
Ctrl+Shift+F Find Activity Looks for activities by Id, description, or specific start or finish dates.
Find & Looks for words you want to change in all activity descriptions and replaces
Ctrl+F Replace them.
Link Creates Finish to Start relationships between all selected activities in the order
Selection they appear in Barchart view.
Unlink
Selection Deletes relationships between all selected activities that match the given type.
Collapse
Network Assigns all selected activities to the first selected activity's network line number
Ctrl+Shift+C Lines putting all selected activities on the same network line.
View
The following toggle their respective Dockable Tool Window on and off.
F3 Activity Codes
F4 Activity Editor
F5 Predecessors
F6 Successors
F8 Task Notes
Resource Assignments Editor
Ctrl+G Resource Utilization Graph
Related Adds an activity related finish to start with the selected activity. This also assigns the
Ctrl+R Activity same activity codes to the new activity that are assigned to the selected one.
Unrelated Adds a non-related activity to the schedule. If there is an activity selected with assigned
Ctrl+U Activity activity codes, the new activity will be assigned to those same codes.
Text Switches to Draw Text Mode when in Network Diagram view.
Image Switches to Draw Image Mode when in Network Diagram view.
Format
Activity Editor
Options Change visible Activity Editor options and manage profiles.
Setup criteria based on activity details under which activities are shown in the current
Filters layout.
Import a schedule from another format such as MPX, Microsoft® Project XML,
Import Primavera P3 and CSV.
Export schedule data to another format such as MPX, Microsoft® Project XML, and
Export CSV.
Reports Print out reports on various details of the schedule.
Schedule
Sort Setup Barchart view to sort activities by Id, description, start or finish dates.
Begin Update Switches into update mode optionally saving off a storepoint.
End Update Finalizes the current update changing the data date to the new proposed data date.
Cancel Update Reverts any changes made during the current update.
Update on
Schedule Marks all early dates in the schedule up to a given date as actual or estimated dates.
F2 Schedule Now Schedules the project using the scheduling method specified in your Scheduling Options.
Turn auto scheduling on or off. While on, Phoenix will automatically reschedule
Auto Scheduling everytime you make a change to an activity.
Scheduling
Options Change the current scheduling method and other scheduling options.
Create
Storepoint Saves off a new storepoint based on your current storepoint.
Manage
Storepoint Lets you create, delete, rename, and import storepoints.
Comparisons Setup previous storepoints compared against the current schedule in Barchart view.
Info
Code Library Manage available activity codes and the order of values.
Calendars Add or remove holidays and non-work days from the project calendar.
Cost Accounts Setup cost accounts to track project allocation and expenses.
Resource Library Setup or change resources that can be assigned to activities in your schedule.
Help
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Using the Toolbar
File Tools
• New: Pulls up the New Project Dialog for starting a new project.
This will not close any projects you currently have open.
• Open: Opens any existing Phoenix Project Manager project.
• Save: Saves the active open project. This is only available if you've
chosen a file to save your project to (using "Save As..." in the File
menu), or previously opened the project from a saved file and you've
made changes to the project.
• Print: Prints your project using your current Page Layout settings.
This will print the Barchart if you are in Barchart view, and the
Network Diagram if you are in Network Diagram view.
Edit Tools
• Cut: Copies all selected activities to the clipboard, then deletes
them from the project.
• Copy: Copies all selected activities to the clipboard.
• Paste: Copies all activities on the clipboard to the project. This will
pull up the Paste Dialog with options for activity Id renaming and other
copy options.
• Undo: Reverts the last change you made to the schedule. This will
not undo changes to the layout or view options except network line
assignments.
• Redo: Repeats the last change that was reverted.
Tool Window Toggle Buttons
These buttons will toggle any of the Dockable Tool Windows on or off.
• Toggle Activity Editor
• Toggle Activity Code Editor
• Toggle Predecessor Editor
• Toggle Successor Editor
• Toggle Task Notes Editor
• Toggle Resource Assignments Editor
• Toggle Resource Utilization Graph
Network Zoom Tools
• Zoom In: Enlarges the Network Diagram view.
• Zoom Out: Shrinks the Network Diagram view.
Other Tools
• Spell Check: Checks all activity descriptions for spelling mistakes.
• CPM Check: Checks the schedule for compliance with CPM Checker
rules.
Network View Modes
These buttons will switch the Network Diagram view mode.
• Edit Mode
• Draw Activity Mode
• Draw Text Mode
• Draw Image Mode
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Dockable Tool Windows
Phoenix Project Manager provides you with five main dockable tool windows to edit the
various details of activities and relationships that you may not be able to change in either
Network Diagram or Barchart views:
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Activity Code Editor
The Activity Code Editor is used to assign activities to groups of activity codes found in
the Code Library. The Activity Code Editor displays a dropdown box for each activity code.
Selecting a code value from any of them will assign all selected activities to that value.
You may also type a new value name directly into the dropdown box and hit the Enter key
on your keyboard to create a new activity code value instead of having to open the Code
Library and add values there first.
The checkboxes toggle the visibility of that activity code so you can quickly show and hide
the activity code levels as needed.
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Activity Editor
The Activity Editor is the primary tool for changing the attributes of individual activities, as
well as providing buttons for creating and deleting activities. It provides access to all
attributes of an activity except activity codes, notes, resources, and relationships. Any of
the fields for changing attributes can be shown or hidden in the Activity Editor configuration.
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Predecessor/Successor Editor
The Predecessor /
Successor Editor
gives you a
convenient place to
manage all of the
relationships that
are the heart of
your schedule.
These windows
show all predecessors and/or successors of the selected activity, as well as the type of
relationship, starts and finishes, lags, and whether a relationship is driving the successor of
that relationship. The lag and relationship type can be edited from this window by double-
clicking the cell you would like to edit, and making the change. Relationships can be deleted
by selecting the predecessor or successor in the list, and clicking the "Delete" button. The
"Lag To" button gives you the ability to select a date the successor should start or finish on
(depending on relationship type), and Phoenix will calculate the amount of lag necessary to
make the activity land on that date (taking non-work calendar days into account) and save
it off in the relationship.
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Task Notes Editor
The Task Notes Editor allows you to attach a note to any activity. To add a task note, select
the desired activity, and add your information in the editor text box, then click OK to save
it. Task notes can only be applied to one activity at a time, so if multiple activities are
selected, the task notes editor is disabled.
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Resource Assignments Editor
This window will let you manage all resources assigned to an activity. Resource assignments
have several attributes you can specify.
To modify the resource assignments of an activity you must first select the activity. From
there you may add or delete resource assignments.
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Resource Utilization Graph
This fixed window shows a time interval histogram and line and bar chart showing the
utilization of any single resource you have selected. The period of time is locked to the
period show above in the barchart or network diagram window. Scrolling the barchart or
network diagram window will also scroll the resource utilization graph window. To use,
simply select the resource you'd like to see in the adjoining resource list and the graph will
be generated. If the graph visibility is toggled it will be included when the project is printed.
The visibility of the graph is stored on a per layout basis.
The graph can be configured by clicking the Configure... button. From there you can
enable and disable the Allocation Bars (including highlighting Over Allocation and the
limit line for Maximum Allocation) and the Accumulation Curve. Allocation bars show
the total allocation for the resource for each day across all activities the resource is assigned
to. The accumulation curve reflects the total allocations of the resource up to the day you
are looking at. With this graph you can tell at a glance how much of a resource you've
allocated up to any point in the project.
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Creating a New Project
To create a new project in Phoenix Project Manager, click the File menu in the menu bar,
and select New, or press Ctrl+N on the keyboard. The New Project dialog will appear
where you can enter in all required project details.
• Project Title: The project title is typically the official name of the
project, or at least the working name. For example, if you were
creating a schedule to renovate a school, the project might be titled
"Hometown Elementary School Renovation".
• Project Description: The project description can be nearly anything,
and is provided for revision names, comments, project details, or any
other conceivable use. For example, if creating the preliminary
schedule for the renovation of a school, the project description might
be "Hometown Elementary School Prelim. Rev 2a w/Codes."
• Project Start: The project start date is the earliest date any activity
can begin. Activities without predecessors will start on this date if no
other restrictions are in place when scheduled.
• Calendar: The default calendar provides a basic workday calendar for
your project. Holidays and other non-work can be added through the
Calendar Creator after creating the project.
Clicking OK will create a new project with one initial activity and start you out in
the Barchart View. Back to Contents
Setting up Activity Codes
The Code Library allows you to define activity codes and values for organizing the activities
in your schedule. The Code Library window can be accessed by selecting Code Library from
the Info menu. Activity codes and values are shown in a hierarchical tree.
Adding Codes and Values
New activity codes can be
easily added by clicking the
Add Code button. You can
add values by selecting the
activity code you want to add
a value to and then clicking
the Add Value button. To edit
the name of the newly created
code or value, select it and
click the Edit button.
Managing Activity Codes
and Values
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Setting up Calendars
Calendars in
Phoenix
keep track
of holidays,
weekends,
and other
periods of
time in your
project
when work
can't be
done and
must be
delayed.
The Calend
ar
Creator can
be found
from
the Info menu.
Only one calendar can be in use for your entire schedule as Phoenix does not support multi-
calendar projects currently. If you selected the wrong calendar when first creating your
project, you can either switch to one of the other default calendars by selecting it and
clicking Set as Calendar, create a new one with the appropriate settings (see below), or
modify the current calendar's settings.
The three default calendars included in all new projects are the 5 Day, 6 Day, and 7
Day calendars. The 5 Day calendar defines Saturdays and Sundays as non-work days by
default, the 6 Day calendar defines Sundays as non-work days by default, and the 7
Day calendar doesn't define any non-work days.
Creating a New Calendar
You can create a new calendar with no non-work definitions by clicking Add New
Calendar button and typing in the name of your calendar.
You can also duplicate an existing calendar by clicking the Clone Calendar button after
selecting the calendar you wish to clone.
Setting up Non-Work Days
Non-work days can be added to any of the calendars including the calendars included by
default by selecting the calendar you want to add them to, and adding one of the two types
of non-work days that describes the behavior you want for that non-work day.
• Single Non-Work Day: This is the most simple of the non-work types you can add to
a calendar. Just select the day you want to make into a non-work day, and click
the Set as Non-Work button under the calendar. This will make that single day (of the
selected month and year) into a non-work day and all activities that overlap that day
will be pushed to finish one day later.
• Repeated Non-Work:' This type of non-work type is used when you need a
specific day off with a set frequency. Select the day you want to make into a
recurring non-work day, and click the Repeat...button under the calendar. You can
choose between daily, weekly, monthly, or yearly. This can be used set a yearly holiday
or non-work days every other week. Set the expiration if you'd like to end the definition
at a fixed date or after a certain number of occurrences.
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Filtering Activities
Filters are a tool for reducing the number of activities displayed in the project without
deleting them or otherwise removing them. Activities that have been filtered out will still be
used for all calculations and reports. Filters can be setup by selecting Filters from
the Tools menu. This window consists of two sections. The lower section shows which filters
are currently defined for the project, and the upper section shows which filters are currently
applied. A filter must first be defined before it can be applied to the project. Filters can also
be imported from another project by clicking the Import button, and selecting the Phoenix
Project Manager project file.
Creating a New
Filter
Clicking the New
Filter button in
the Available
Filters section of
the filter window will
open up the
Create/Modify
Filter dialog. Then
enter a name for the
new filter and select
either Matches
All if you need the
filter to match all
criteria specified to
be considered a match or Matches Any to make the filter consider an activity that matches
any one of the criteria a match for your new filter. After criteria have been setup for your
new filter, click OK to save the filter to your Available Filters.
Setting up Criteria
While all your criteria can be specified in different filters, it may make more sense to setup
multiple criteria in a single filter so Filter Actions are more clear when applying multiple
filters in complex filter situations in large projects. To create criteria for a filter, click
the Add New button, which will create a single new criterion. Criteria consist of a target
field, comparison type, and one to two parameters. These attributes must be specified in
order.
1. First, select from the following available target fields:
• Activity ID
• Description
• Calendar
• Original Duration
• Free Float
• Total Float
• Actual Dates
• Actual Start
• Actual Finish
• Early Dates
• Early Start
• Early Finish
• Late Dates
• Late Start
• Late Finish
• Estimated Dates
• Estimated Start
• Estimated Finish
• Any Assigned Activity Codes
2. Then select the type of comparison you want to make on the target field. These will vary
based on the selected target field.
3. Once a comparison type has been selected, one or two parameters will be shown to be used
with the comparison type on the target field.
4. Once the parameters have been specified, click Add New to specify additional criteria and
repeat the process, or OK to add the filter to your list of Available Filters.
Criteria can be removed from a filter by selecting the row with the criteria, and
clicking Remove.
Setting up a Filter Chain
Once a Filter has been defined, it can be applied to the project by selecting it in the list of
Available Filters, and clicking the Add To Active Filters button. This will add it to the list of
Active Filters in the lower section of the filters window. If more than one filter is applied to
the schedule, the filters can be ordered using the Move Up and Move Down buttons, so
the filter at the top of the list is applied first, and the remaining filters are applied in
descending order.
If multiple filters are applied, there are two options for every filter after the first. The Filter
From option specifies whether this filter is applied to a list of all activities in the project, or
just the results of the last filter. The Action option specifies which of the following actions
the filter will perform:
• Inclusive: This filter will add its results to the results from the last filter. The first filter
in a filter chain always uses this behavior. Applying this action to the results filtered
from the last filter will result in the same list of activities since no activities will be
matched that aren't already in the resulting list of activities.
• Exclusive: This filter will remove matching activities from the results of the last filter.
There is no difference between applying this action to All Activities or Last Filter since it
can only remove activities that are already in the results from the last filter.
• Invert: Any activities that match this filter will be removed from the results from the
last filter, and all other additional activities that match that weren't previously in the
results from the last filter will be added to the list of remaining activities for the final
result of this filter. If this action is applied to the results from the last filter, it has the
same effect as an Exclusive filter, since only activities from the last filter's results will
be matched in this filter.
Once all of the filters have been applied in order, a final resulting list of activities is created.
You must select whether you would like those activities to be shown or hidden. If you
select Show, the activities will be shown, and all other activities will be hidden. If you
select Hide, they will be hidden, and all other activities will be shown. To remove a single
filter from the list of Active Filters, select the filter and click the Delete Filter button. To
remove all Active Filters, click the Clear Filters button.
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Running Reports
Phoenix comes with numerous predefined reports on most aspects and details of any
schedule, and may provide additional report templates available for download in the future.
To print any available reports, open the Reports window by clicking Reports in
the Tools menu.
To preview a report just double-click the desired report from the list or select it and click
the Preview button. When you select a report from the list, a description of the selected
report is shown on the right.
If you need to change your printer settings you can do so by clicking the Page
Setup button at the bottom of the window. If you adjust your printer settings before
previewing a report, your changes will be reflected in the preview window.
If "Organize by Activity Codes" is checked, Phoenix will organize all activities the same
way they are organized in Barchart view with activity code labels. The order in which they
are organized can be configured from the Organization Format window.
The Save to File button will run the selected report, but rather than printing it, it will save
the report to a HTML file suitable for publishing to a website or opening in other applications
such as a word processor. When the button is pushed, Phoenix will ask you for a location to
save the file to.
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Layouts and Formatting
Phoenix Project Manager allows you to change the look and feel of most of your schedule.
This is done mostly through the Format window found in the Format menu. Phoenix also has
the ability to store off all of your current view options and formatting in multiple layouts
giving you the ability to customize your view for use during specific specific stages of
working on your schedule, working on different areas of your schedule, and/or for sending
your schedule to others already laid out how they expect to see the schedule. You can setup
as many layouts as you want or need and switch between them with ease using the Layout
Manager.
All of the following options are saved off individually per layout (and possibly more):
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Layout Manager
A Phoenix project can have multiple Layouts which determine how the schedule is
displayed. There is one Active Layout which is used for the current display of the schedule.
All formatting options are stored in a layout and you can customize the entire appearance of
the schedule several times by using multiple layouts. The current active layout is listed in
the first status bar section from the left.
Layouts also determine what the active storepoint is and what comparisons are displayed.
By default a layout is set up to track the newest storepoint. This saves you the trouble of
having to manually change the active storepoint for every layout when you create a new
storepoint. If you'd like to lock a layout's active storepoint to a particular storepoint you can
change that option in the Manage Storepoints window.
Manage Layouts
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Activity Editor Options
The Activity Editor Options window can be found by selecting Activity Editor Options from
the Format menu. This window lets you configure which fields are shown in the Activity
Editor.
• Default Editor: The default editor configuration shows all controls and
is the default for any new project.
• Update Mode Editor: When starting an update Phoenix will
automatically switch to the Update Mode configuration. This
configuration only shows controls that are most useful for updating a
schedule.
For each row of the Activity Editor, you will see a list of controls contained in the row. For a
given configuration you can choose which rows you would like to be visible by selecting the
checkbox next to it. To hide a row, simply clear the checkbox.
The Show activity management buttons option allows you to show or hide the Activity
Editor buttons for creating and deleting activities.
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Timescale
This format window affects how the timescale is displayed in Barchart view, Network
Diagram view, and all printouts. The timescale is split into multiple tiers (or rows), each
with the ability to show different units of time. The format window gives you a preview of
any timescale settings you change in this window on the top so you can see how it will look
before you apply those changes. The bottom tabs contain all the configurable settings for
each individual tier.
Each timescale tier can be turned on or off by toggling the Shown checkbox. Tiers can be
set to show years, months, weeks, or days by changing the Display setting.
Tip: If you need to come back to this window to make changes to the timescale often, you
can quickly access it by double-clicking in the timescale at any time.
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Columns
From here you can
add, remove, re-
order, and change
the look of the
Activity List header
as it looks in both
the barchart view
and in any printouts.
The top window
gives you a preview
of the columns, and
also gives you the
ability to drag and
drop columns in a
different order as
well as resize any
column by dragging
its right border. The
font and background
color settings apply
to the entire Activity
List header, the
color can be
changed by clicking
the Background
Color button.
You can add new
columns to the Activity List by clicking the Add button and selecting the column type you
want from the list. If you have a column selected in the Column Configuration list, new
columns will be added after the selected column, otherwise they will be added at the end.
By clicking the Edit button you can change a selected column's label and width as it will be
shown in the Activity List. Any column in the list can be removed by selecting it, and clicking
Remove. You can also change the order of any selected column by clicking the Move Up
and Move Down buttons.
If you only need to change the order of the columns or their sizes, you can do so without
opening the Format window by dragging the right border of the column in the Activity List
header itself and dragging and dropping the columns just like you can in the preview
window. You can also have Phoenix set an automatic column size by double clicking the
right border of any column in the main Activity List header (not in the preview). Phoenix will
calculate the smallest size the column can go without cutting off any information and set it
to that width.
Tip: Quick changes to the headers can be made by double-clicking on the Activity List
header at any time to pull up this window.
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Bars
The appearance of
activities in the
Barchart view is very
flexible making it
possible to configure
different types of
activities to stand
out from the rest of
the schedule and
make it easier to
identify them. It is
also possible to add
additional activity
information
displayed next to the
activity. Every bar's
appearance can be
changed from this
window including
each comparison's
activities if
comparisons are
setup. The top
portion lists all available bar types you can change. Selecting any one of them will show it's
current settings in the Configure Bar Appearance area. From there, you can click on any
area of the activity to change it's options.
Activity information can be added to activities by clicking on any of the outside 8 boxes
around the activity in in Configure Bar Appearance area. Adding text to any of the left 3
boxes will result in that text being drawn before the start date of those activities. Adding
text on the right will result in that text being drawn after the finish date. The center three
boxes are for configuring the bar and endpoints of any activities.
Note: Any text added to the top or bottom of any activities will collapse on top of the
activity if the row size is too small to fit it. Remember to change the row size accordingly
from the rows configuration page in the format window.
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Sightlines
Project sightlines
can be turned on or
off by toggling the
checkbox next to the
sightline(s) you want
to turn on or off.
Below is a brief
description of what
each of the
sightlines settings
are for:
• Project
Start
Date: Thi
s includes
both the vertical line marking the project start date, as well as the text
"Project Start Date" which appears next to it. The color for both is set
by using the color picker.
• Data Date: The data date is the date that the schedule should be up-
to-date with from the last update. This setting includes the vertical line
marking the data date, the text "Data Date" which appears next to it,
and, when in Update Mode, includes the update net as well that
spans from the current data date to the new proposed data date for
that update. Turning the data date off will also turn off display of these
other features. The color for all three features is set by using the color
picker.
• Major/Minor Sightlines: Major and minor sightlines function in the
same manner. They act as visual guides that mark a particular
repeating interval of time. If enabled, their appearance can be
configured by selecting one of the following line
styles: Solid, Dotted, Short Dash, Long Dash, or Dot Dash. The
major and minor sightlines can be set to repeat at any of the following
lengths of time: Days, Weeks, Months, or Years. If, for example,
you set either of the major or minor sightlines to repeat every three
months, you will have four sightlines for every year at a quarterly
interval.
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Organization
Every activity code
in your schedule can
be organized in a
different order, and
every value for each
activity code can
shown in a different
order as well. You
must have activity
codes setup in the
Code Library first
though before being
able to change
anything in this
window. The values
can be re-ordered
from the Code
Library, while the
activity code
ordering is managed here. The activity code ordering in this window determines which codes
will be organized first, second, and so on. This has a slightly different effect on both
Barchart and Network Diagram views, but still applies to both.
In Barchart view, all activities are organized by their assigned values in the first activity
code listed, then broken down further from there based on the activity code listed second,
and so on. Values are listed in the same order they appear in the Code Library. In Network
Diagram view, activities are grouped the same way except boxes are drawn around the top
activity code values first, and broken down from there. It is possible (and likely) that you
will see two or more boxes for the same activity code value for codes that aren't listed first
in this organization window just as you would see multiple sections of the Barchart
dedicated to the same activity code value, they are just split up on the higher level activity
codes first.
Organizing by specific activity codes can be turned off completely by toggling the checkbox
next to that activity code. Turning off organizing by an activity code will skip that code, and
move on to the next. Activities assigned to values in an activity code you turn off will not be
hidden, however, that can be accomplished with Filters.
Changing the font of activity codes only currently affects the font used for the labels in the
Network Diagram view while the color will affect the color of the activity code in both
Barchart and Network Diagram views.
These settings control how activity codes are drawn in the Network Diagram view.
• Labels: If on, activity code value descriptions will appear in the upper left corner of all
activities assigned to that value (split up in the order they are organized).
• Outlines: This will toggle drawing outlines around all activities assigned to activity
code values shown.
• Background: This fills in a lightly colored background highlighting all activities
assigned to activity code values shown.
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Dates
All dates shown in your project in Barchart, Network Diagram, the Activity List, printouts,
reports, and others can be formatted using the date formatting options given here.
• Date Order: Specifies the order in which the date elements (day,
month, year) are displayed. If 4-Digit year is checked, years will be
displayed with 4 digits, (e.g. 1997, 2005). Otherwise, years will be
displayed with 2 digits (97, 05).
• Date Separator: Defines the character inserted between the date
elements.
• Month Format: Defines whether months will be displayed as a
number, full name, or three letter abbreviated name.
The Preview shows an example of how the dates would be displayed if the current options
were saved.
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Critical Path
The first setting in this window lets you choose whether to use the longest path to
determine whether an activity is critical or to mark any activity with a total float below the
specified amount as critical.
The appearance options allow you to define how the critical path will be shown. By selecting
the Color button, you can choose the color that will be used for showing critical path
elements. You can choose which elements of the critical path you would like to have drawn
in this color by checking or unchecking the checkbox next to an element.
These are the elements you can choose to have colored when they are part of the critical
path:
• Tasks
• Milestones
• Endpoints
• Relationships
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Importing
Phoenix is capable of importing projects from other software formats such as Microsoft
Project and Primavera. To import a project from another format click Tools and choose the
desired import method from the Import submenu. It is important to note that when you
import data from other formats there will be information that cannot be imported or
represented perfectly in Phoenix.
Primavera 3.1 Projects
Primavera projects are stored in a database format that requires specific software to be
installed on your computer. If you own Primavera, simply having it installed on your
computer should be sufficient. If you do not own Primavera, you can install a third-party
database engine called Pervasive SQL.
Project Directory
To import a Primavera
project, a directory must
be selected that contains
valid Primavera project
files (named with a file
extension of .P3). The
default location
is C:\P3WIN\PROJECTS.
You can click the
Browse button to select
a different directory if
you have project files
located elsewhere.
Available Projects
Once you have selected
a directory
the Available
Projects list will show
you the Primavera
projects found in the
selected directory. The
project name and
description are shown
just as in Primavera. Select a project from the list and click the Import button to import it.
The Schedule immediately when importing has finished option causes the project to
be scheduled automatically once it has been imported successfully.
MPX or XML Projects
To import from MPX or XML projects, browse to the location of the file and click Open. You
will be presented with an Import Options dialog that shows some information about the
project file.
The project title and number of tasks and calendars in the project are shown in the header
at the top of the Import Options dialog.
There are two tabs shown in the Import Options dialog:
• Information: Gives information about the import capability for the chosen file.
• Tasks: Lists the tasks found in the project file and allows you to choose whether or not
to import tasks and/or relationships from the project.
The Immediately schedule after importing option causes the project to be scheduled
automatically once it has been imported successfully.
Comma
Separated
Values (CSV)
XER
To import from an XER project browse to the location of the file and click Open. The project
will be imported immediately without prompt.
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Exporting
Phoenix is capable of exporting projects to other software formats such as Microsoft Project
and CSV files. To export data from Phoenix click Tools and choose the desired export
method from the Export submenu.
MPX and Microsoft Project XML
The MPX format was created by Microsoft as a common way to transfer data between
different scheduling software. The format is somewhat limited, however can be a good way
to transfer project data between Phoenix and other software such as Microsoft Project. For
transferring data to and from Microsoft Project, however, the XML format is desired because
it can contain much more information than the MPX format can and therefore your schedule
data will be more accurate.
To export data to either of these formats, select it from the Export submenu.
The CSV format exports a list of all activities and relationships in a simple format that can
be easier to manipulate. CSV files can be opened directly by Microsoft Excel for editing and
Microsoft Project allows you to import from CSV files easily. Please note that the CSV format
only allows you to export activities and information related to each activity. No project
information is exported.
To export data to the CSV format, select CSV... from the Export submenu.
For the CSV format there is only a single tab shown that allows you to choose whether to
export tasks, relationships, or both.
Just as with MPX and Microsoft Project XML exporting, the Schedule before
exporting option causes the project to be scheduled automatically before it is exported.
XER
The XER format exports most of the data your schedule contains. You can enter a new
project name or keep the name you have as well as a short WBS (Work Breakdown
Structure) name.
You can opt to use your current activity code and organization for generating a WBS
hierarchy or choose to not have a WBS structure at all.
SDEF
The SDEF (Standard Data Exchange Format) can be used to generate SDEF files. The SDEF
file format does not have rigid requirements for some fields so Phoenix provides a variety of
options to make sure your exported SDEF file will work with your other applications.
• Project name: You can customize it to be different than the name you've given your
Phoenix project. Can be up to forty eight characters long.
• Project identifier: A short code to identify your project easily. Can be up to four
characters long.
• Contract number: Your contract number. Can be up to six characters long.
• Contractor name: Your contractor name. Can be up to thirty six characters long.
You can optionally map the assignment of Activity Codes in your project to various activity
fields native to the SDEF format. To map these simply select the SDEF field from the
dropdown and the Activity Code from the dropdown, then click Add. Warnings will be shown
if the activity codes you are mapping have assignments that do not fit the format
restrictions of the SDEF fields you are mapping them to. These warnings are purely for your
information. You can still export if warnings are shown.
The mappable SDEF fields are:
• Workers per day: Maximum length of three numeric characters. Non-numeric code
assignments will use "0" for this field.
• Responsibility Code: Maximum length of four characters.
• Work Area Code: Maximum length of four characters.
• Mod/Claim Code: Maximum length of six characters.
• Bid Item Code: Maximum length of six characters.
• Phase of Work Code: Maximum length of two characters.
• Category of Work Code: Maximum length of one character.
• Feature of Work: Maximum length of thirty characters.
You can toggle several compatibility options at the bottom of the dialog. Whether to activate
or deactivate these options depends on the compliance your SDEF file requires for
interoperability:
• Allow holiday dates without year: If year-less holiday dates are allowed the non-
work definitions in your Phoenix project will only have to be listed once in the SDEF
holiday list rather than being listed for every year throughout the duration of your
project. This also means that previous and future holidays that fall outside the current
time frame of the project are supported.
• Allow alphanumeric calendar codes Allowing alphanumeric calendar codes allows
you to export more than ten calendars (up to 36).
• Allow alphanumeric activity ids Allowing alphanumeric activity ids lets you export
with the full activity ids you use in Phoenix (but still limited to the maximum length
defined in the SDEF specification). If you do not use alphabetic characters in your
Phoenix activity ids this option does not concern you.
• Allow negative relationship lag If you do not allow negative relationship lag the
value "0" will be used whenever a negative lag occurs. Disallowing this can affect dates
scheduled by a third party tool.
• Allow extended constraint types Allows you to properly export Finish-No-Earlier,
Must-Start-On, Must-Finish-On, and Start-No-Later constraints. No constraint is
exported for these types if this option is not enabled. Disallowing this can affect dates
scheduled by a third party tool.
Raw Relationships
The Raw Relationships export option can be found on the Export submenu of
the Tools menu. This format exports only the relationships in a simple columnar CSV
format. This can be much easier for some software (such as Primavera) to handle than the
relationship format in the CSV exporter. This writes one relationship per line with each
relationship being composed of 4 fields: Activity ID, Successor, Lag, and Relationship Type.
Back to Contents
Storepoints
The storepoint system is useful for tracking and comparing revisions of a schedule by taking
a snapshot of the project at a particular point in time (often done before updating a
schedule's progress). Every schedule has at least one storepoint to hold the activity data.
These storepoints can then be used for generating comparisons. Storepoints are often given
names such as "Preliminary", "Baseline", or "Update 1" but any name can be given.
The storepoint that can be edited is called the Active Storepoint. Which storepoint is the
Active Storepoint is specific to the layout you are currently on. Each layout can have a
different Active Storepoint specified but only one storepoint can be marked as active at a
time for each layout. You can quickly see which storepoint is active by looking at the second
status bar section from the left.
By default a layout is set up to track the newest storepoint. This saves you the trouble of
having to manually change the active storepoint for every layout when you create a new
storepoint. If you'd like to lock a layout's active storepoint to a particular storepoint you can
change that option in the Manage Storepoint window described below.
Creating a Storepoint
Manage Storepoints
There are several pieces of information shown for each version used in the comparison:
Back to Contents
CPM Checker
The CPM Checker is a unique and powerful tool. It helps you to make sure that your
schedule makes sense, is easy to maintain, and does not violate the Critical Path Method.
Settings
The values you use in the CPM Checker settings determine how the CPM Checker looks at
your schedule. If any activities or relationships violate the bounds set in the CPM Checker
settings, a balloon note will be shown pointing to the violating activity. If the percentage of
critical activities is greater than the Maximum Percent Critical setting, you will get a
message box informing you of the problem when you start the CPM Checker.
After you have run the CPM Checker, you can review the explanations you provided while
running the CPM Checker. To review them, just click Review CPM Explanations on
the Tools menu. The Review Explanations dialog will allow you to view and edit the
explanations. You can delete an explanation by checking the Delete this
Explanation checkbox and subsequently clicking OK. By clicking Previous and Next you
can navigate through the explanations. You can save any changes to the explanations that
you have made by clicking OK. If you click Cancel, none of your changes will be saved.
Back to Contents
Setting up Resources
The Resource Library allows you to define various types of resources that can be assigned to
activities in your schedule. The Resource Library window can be accessed by
selecting Resource Library from the Info menu.
Adding Resources
A new resource can be created by clicking
the Add button in the Resource Library. From
here you can define the attributes of your new
resource which include:
• Name: This is what your new resource will be
referred to as throughout your Project. Your
resource's name must be unique within the
Resource Library.
• Type: Your resource may be one of three
types. Labor is used for manpower (e.g.,
landscaping crew or foreman). Non-Labor is
used for equipment such as a crane or an
excavator. The Material type would be used
for resources like cubic yards of concrete or
piles to be driven.
• Unit Label: If you would like to change the
units in which quantities of the resource are
shown you may specify a customized unit label.
For instance, you may want your resource for
flooring tiles represented in "square feet".
• Maximum: This is the maximum concurrent allocation your new resource may have on
a single day of work before the resource is considered Over Allocated. This can be
useful for identifying when overlapping activities that share a resource would exceed
the actual quantity that is available for work or usage. For example, if you have five
carpenters on a job site and two tasks with three carpenters required for each you may
specify five for the maximum. If the two tasks overlap you can quickly identify the
period of time during which you have committed more carpenters than you have
available and adjust the schedule accordingly. See the Resource Utilization Graph help
for more information on how this is accomplished.
• Billing Method: Whether the billing rate is applied Hourly or Daily.
• Hours Per Day: If the Billing Method is Hourly you must specify how many hours
per day to bill for.
• Rate: The monetary rate for each day of use.
• Cost Per Use: The base level bill for each usage of this resource.
A valid value is required for all attributes in order to create the resource.
Managing Resources
• Sorting: The resources in the library may be sorted by any attribute by clicking on the
corresponding column header. This ordering does not affect resource behavior and is
available so you may more easily examine the resources available to your project.
• Delete: A resource may be deleted by selecting it and clicking the Delete button. All
resource allocations will also be deleted. Multiple resources can be deleted in one action
by selecting more than one resource using the Ctrl or Select keys on the keyboard
during selection.
• Edit: A resource can be modified by clicking the Edit button. A dialog similar to the
Add Resource dialog will appear. See the Adding Resources above for a description of
resource attributes.
Changes you make are not applied until you click the OK button. If you want to not apply
the changes you have made click Cancel and any modifications made since you opened the
dialog will be discarded.
Back to Contents
Changes
April 25, 2011: Version 3.0.0
• Feature: Multiple calendars are now supported.
• Feature: Calendars are included in copy/cut and pasting.
• Feature: Added Early and Actual Start/Finish columns.
• Feature: Manual Successor dialog can now select multiple successors
and is faster.
• Feature: Draw driving relationships as a solid line in barchart.
• Feature: Mac and Windows users now use the same activation code
regardless of platform.
• Change: Improved timescale appearance.
• Change: Greatly increased speed of drawing.
• Change: Increased the speed of some operations.
• Change: Improved icons, cursors, and other graphics.
• Change: Default printing page margins are now 0.25"x0.5"
• Change: Available storepoints are now sorted by creation date in
Compare Storepoints dialog.
• Change: Use Monday as the start of the week rather than Sunday.
• Fixed: The drawing mode in Network Diagram no longer affects
Barchart.
• Fixed: You can no longer shrink the schedule in such a way that
scrollbars disappear but you are scrolled off and unable to see any of
the schedule.
• Fixed: Node Dates now show up for Finish Milestones in Network
Diagram.
• Fixed: Crash that can occur when scrolling the resource graph.
• Fixed: Resource assignments are now copied when a storepoint is
cloned.
• Fixed: Resource utilization graph uses the filtered activities rather than
all activities.
• Fixed: Feature of Work assignments from P3 are correctly handling
duplicates during import.