Gantt chart
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"Gantt" redirects here. For other meanings, see "Gantt (disambiguation)".
Image:Gantt-chart.png A Gantt chart is a popular type of bar chart, that aims to show the timing of tasks or activities as they occur over time. Although the Gantt chart did not initially indicate the relationships between activities this has become more common in current usage as both timing and interdependencies between tasks can be identified.
In project management, a Gantt chart can show when the project terminal elements start and finish, summary elements (shown) or terminal element dependencies (not shown). A terminal element is defined as the smallest task tracked as part of the project effort.
Since the initial introduction of Gantt charts, they have become an industry standard as a key project management tool for representing the phases, tasks and activities that are scheduled as part of a project Work Breakdown Structure or timeline of activities.
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Historical Development
The initial format of the chart was developed by Henry L. Gantt (1861-1919) in 1910 (see "Work, Wages and Profit" by H. L. Gantt, published by The Engineering Magazine, NY, 1910).
Although now considered standard practice, the introduction of the technique was considered quite revolutionary at the time. In recognition of his contributions, the Henry Laurance Gantt medal is awarded for distinguished achievement in management and service to the community.
Henry Gantt created a great number of different charts and inspired many others. The Gantt chart that is popular today was described in 1942 as a layout chart by W. Clark.
The use of additional charting lines to represent the dependencies between tasks was a much later innovation and did not really become established until the late 1980's.
Creating Gantt Charts with Software
Most modern project scheduling packages are able to produce a representation of tasks in a Gantt format. Other project management applications eschew the concept in favor of simpler communication tools (message boards, to-do lists, simple scheduling, etc.).
Organizations needing complex and dynamic collaborative Gantt charts can use web-based project management tools.
Alternative Charting Techniques
Other methods exist to represent the tasks within a project. Other than the Gantt chart, the Network Diagram is probably the most prevalent. However, it is used more to show the relationship between tasks rather than focusing on the timeline as does the Gantt chart.
External links
- Project schedule from Applied Software Project Management (O'Reilly)
- Project schedule from University of Washington's project management site
- discussion of the Gantt chart format on Edward Tufte's website.
- The Gantt Project, an open source computer program for the creation of Gantt charts.
- GTD-Manager, a Java program for visualizing project plans / progression using Gantt and Date Drift Charts
- The R programming language can produce Gantt charts via the plotrix package. It is shown in the R Graph Gallery
- Open Workbench, open source project scheduling software
- AnyChart Gantt, Flash component for creating Gantt Charts
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