| Time unitsSeveral lead times can be defined in days. Because calendars are defined in hours/minutes, you must specify
how the lead time days are calculated in the calendar. The rule is that lead times in days are planned as working days,
which means that the available time on a day is one day of lead
time. Example Planning backwards The calendar runs from 8:00 to 17:00: - Planning one day backwards from 11:55 sets
the start date on 8:00 (start of the day)
- Planning one day backwards from Tuesday
7:55 sets the start date on Monday
8:00
- You work from Monday to Friday, planning two days backwards
from Monday 13:15 sets the start on Friday
8:00
Example Planning forward The calendar runs from 8:00 to 17:00: - Planning one day forward from 11:55 sets
the start date on 17:00 (end of the day)
- Planning one day forward from Monday 17:05 sets the end date on Tuesday 17:00
- You work from Monday to Friday, planning two days forward from Friday 13:15 sets the end on Monday
17:00
Example Planning 0 days Therefore, if you plan: - Zero (0) days backward/forward from 13:00
Monday, nothing happens because this time is already the
working moment
- Zero (0) days backward from Monday 18:00,
the date is set to Monday 17:00
- Zero (0) days forward from Monday 18:00,
the date is set to Tuesday 8:00
Note You can also plan zero (0) days. This sets the dates to the
nearest working moment. | |