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Updated by Jens Ulferts over 1 year ago
* Every project has optionally a start date and a finish date.
* The project start date constraints the first stage/gate.
* The last stage/gate defines the project finish date.
* Project life cycle steps receive a duration that can be set independently from the start/end date of that step. A step might thus only have the duration set.
* When setting a start date/finish date, the life cycle steps are scheduled based on the duration. Start/Finish date of a lifecycle steps are recalculated in case they are already set and violate the constraint to be before/after the project's start/finish date.
* The project start date constraints the first stage/gate.
* The last stage/gate defines the project finish date.
* Project life cycle steps receive a duration that can be set independently from the start/end date of that step. A step might thus only have the duration set.
* When setting a start date/finish date, the life cycle steps are scheduled based on the duration. Start/Finish date of a lifecycle steps are recalculated in case they are already set and violate the constraint to be before/after the project's start/finish date.