Sequential tasks: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 01:47, 25 June 2019
In Planfix it is possible to create a chain of tasks that will appear and be performed by performers successively. The main advantage of successive tasks is that the whole chain is for the time being in drafts, which means that the "future" tasks do not clutter the lists of performers and their work becomes more accessible and more understandable.
How it works
To sequentially work through the chain of successive tasks, they must be combined into one general task and have an activated "'Successive Task check box. The order of their location in the check-list of the task determines the order in which these tasks are performed in the chain.
To ensure that following tasks are not available to the performers ahead of time, they must be in the status "Draft."
The mechanism of sequential execution of tasks works as follows:
- When the task is activated (transferring it from the draft to the status New) the first consecutive (with the enabled feature Successive task) is automatically activated in the chain.
- After the first successive subtask is completed (or transferred to inactive status), the next successive subtask in the chain is automatically activated.
- Moreover, so on, until all successive subtasks in the list are completed.
Creating a chain of successive tasks
It is better to create a chain right from the root task:
As soon as you activate the Successive Task feature, Planfix automatically translates the status of the created task into Draft. At the same time Planfix allows you to manually change the status of the created task to New.
Inside the above task, you can create subtasks in a complete form or by creating a quick task in the "Subtasks" panel:
If the task has a Successive task and is in the status of Draft, then the created subtasks will also automatically receive this feature and status. If you created a task in the status New, the first of the subtasks will also receive this status, and the subsequent ones will be created in the status 'Draft'. By default, all the subtasks that are created will receive the Successive Task sign.
To run the chain into work it is enough to translate the status of the root task into "New":
More information
- You can do template task with the sign "Successive task" and use it in your business processes. When creating a task for such a template, the root task and the first subtask become active, the remaining subtasks are waiting for their turn.
- Subtasks can be assigned to different performers, so the system copes well with processes such as "The task for the coder should be delivered after the designer's task is completed." In this case, the designer and layout designer may not even suspect about the existence of each other and the presence of such dependencies: the entire chain of tasks is seen only by the author, and each performer sees only his task.
- You determine whether subtasks need to know about the existence of a task. If you do not give them access to it - they will not see it, for Planfix it's a normal situation. Therefore, what is for you is only one of a chain of successive subtasks, for an artist, it can look like an ordinary task.