Sunflower Gantt Chart 1.4 Project Progress line (frontend line)
To vividly represent the project progress, you can display the progress line on the Gantt chart. For a given progress date (or status Date) of the project, the sunflower Gantt Chart draws a progress line to connect ongoing tasks and the tasks that should begin, and creates a chart in the Gantt chart, for working hours that fall behind the schedule, the vertex points to the left; for working hours that are earlier than the schedule, the vertex points to the right. The distance between the vertex and the vertical line indicates the degree to which the task advances or lags behind the schedule on the progress or status Date. When you drag a task bar or modify the task completion percentage, the Progress line is associated. You can display multiple progress lines for Gantt charts on different dates and change the appearance of the lines.
Based on the new frontend of version 1.4, version 1.5 has released a compressed Gantt chart. Compressing Gantt charts not only makes it more intuitive for users to view projects, but also allows users to flexibly apply Gantt charts from the resource perspective!
In traditional Gantt charts, each task occupies one line, no matter how important or humble the task is. Sometimes do you think this method is too much space-consuming and hard to print paper, not in line with the current trend of energy conservation and emission reduction?
In response, sunflower Gantt Chart releases a compressed Gantt chart. In the same summary task, the compressed Gantt Chart tries to fold the subtask into a row. The specific branch rules are as follows:
A) if time overlaps are found, wrap the line. B) According to the task sequence number, the Gantt bar of the subsequent task can only be located at the bottom or right of the previous task.
After the sunflower is used to compress the Gantt chart, the display space required by the project is greatly reduced, allowing you to view the entire project more intuitively.