> Am 30.05.2015 um 13:33 schrieb Bernhard Schmitz : > > Hi, > > my org-gantt.el is now in a usable state. It creates gantt charts via pgfgantt directly from headlines in org mode, using deadlines, schedules, effort estimates and (optionally) clocked time. Sounds like a good idea. I tried writing pgfgantt manually but once I finished updating the chart, it was already out of date. Getting the information from org would be fine. I tried org-gantt on a current project and ran into one problem: I track progress with * Task [%] and * Task [/] Of course the % causes a problem when exporting to LaTeX. I suggest to either ignore [%] and [/] or use them as an alternative to show how much is completed. It is probably a better metric than hours worked. pgfgantt doesn’t handle \ganttbar commands without start and end date. Therefor I can’t export an incomplete chart. You may want to set the entries with missing scheduling information to the first day of the chart. (Maybe mark the task or label with a color to indicate that they are incomplete.) (See below for some different ideas.) A two month chart doesn’t fit into \textwidth. I wrapped it into a sideways environment (provided by rotating.sty), maybe a sideways option? For a project with 2000 person hours[1] I’ll probably need a separate export and print it on A0 paper[2]. Some kind of scaling would be fine (show weeks / month instead of days). For a huge project it may be nice to limit the levels printed: Just Module 1 - 8 for the Management and each Module with the submodules for the project leader. Similar to maxlevel in the clocktable. I’m not sure about inheritance: If I have a deadline for a task, should the subtasks inherit that deadline unless an explicit deadline is given? If I have a deadline for a task and efforts for all subtasks, should the task inherit that effort? That way I can give a deadline to the task and estimate efforts to get an initial chart. Using this chart I can divide the subtasks between workers, rearrange the deadlines for the subtasks and finally define a scheduled date for the main task. This gives me another idea: Filter / color by tag. Print only tasks tagged :Axel: to show my workload, and print tasks tagged :Sam_One: to show tasks I have delegated. Color tasks by tags to show who is assigned, white for unassigned tasks. Axel [1] A 2000 PH project is not my usual project size, a few hundred is more common. [2] I have access to an A0 printer but I usually draw with felt markers on (literal) wallpaper. Much faster for an initial design and I can use „real“ cut and paste:-)