If you customize elements—such as tables, views, fields, or filters—in one project, you will probably want to use those elements in a new project. Some customized elements are stored in the project in which you create them, whereas others (menus and toolbars) are stored in the global template. In either case, you can copy elements to other projects or templates by using the Organizer. If you want a customized element available to every new project, use the Organizer to copy the element to the global template. In addition, you can use the Organizer to rename or remove elements from a project or template.
For information about using the global template, see the section titled Working with the Project Global Template in Chapter 28. To use the enterprise global template, see the section titled Standardizing Enterprise Project Elements in Chapter 21.
The Organizer includes tabs for almost every type of customizable element in Microsoft Project (custom formulas belong to the custom fields in which you define them). By clicking a tab, you can see the elements of that type that are available in two project files. These project files can be active projects or templates, so you can copy customized elements between active projects or from a project to a template, or even restore the original element from a template to a project.
You can copy, delete, or rename customizable elements by including the following:
Calendars of working time
Filters
Forms
Fields
Groups
Maps for importing and exporting data
Tables
Toolbars
Reports
Modules of Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) code and macros
Views
To open the Organizer, click Tools, Organizer. An Organizer button to open the Organizer dialog box is also available in the following dialog boxes:
No matter which type of element you copy, the procedure is the same. You choose a source file that contains the element you want to copy, choose a destination file into which you want to copy the element, and then copy the element.
Follow these steps to copy an element from a project to the global template:
Open the project that contains the element you want to copy.
Click Tools, Organizer to open the Organizer dialog box (see Figure 25-29).
Click the tab for the type of element you want to copy.
In the <Element> Available In box on the right side of the dialog box, click the project that contains the element you want to copy.
<Element> stands for the name of the current tab.
Click the name of the element you want to copy from the list of elements on the right side of the dialog box.
Click Copy. If an element with the same name already exists in the global template, Microsoft Project asks you to confirm that you want to replace the element in the global template. Click Yes to replace the element in the global template with the one from the source project.
To copy the element with a different name, click Rename and then type a new name.
To copy an element between two projects, do the following:
Open both the source and destination projects.
Click Tools, Organizer to open the Organizer dialog box.
Click the tab for the type of element you want to copy.
In the <Element> Available In box on the right side of the dialog box, click the source project.
In the <Element> Available In box on the left side of the dialog box, click the destination project.
Click the name of the element you want to copy from the list of elements on the right side of the dialog box.
Click Copy. If an element with the same name already exists in the destination, Microsoft Project asks you to confirm that you want to replace the element in the destination project. Click Yes to replace the element in the destination project with the one from the source project.
To copy the element with a different name, click No. Then click Rename and enter a new name.
Although customized elements can simplify your work, extraneous elements in projects and templates can be distracting. When you copy a customized element to the global template, you no longer need it in the project in which you created it. Similarly, if you create a customized element by accident, you can remove it using the Organizer. To do this, follow these steps:
Open the project that contains the element you want to delete.
Click Tools, Organizer to open the Organizer dialog box.
Click the tab for the type of element that you want to delete.
In the <Element> Available In box on the right side of the dialog box, click the project that contains the element you want to delete.
<Element> stands for the name of the current tab.
Click the name of the element you want to remove from the list of elements on the right side of the dialog box.
Click Delete. In the confirmation box, click Yes to delete the element.
You can use the Organizer to rename customized elements. For example, you should rename a customized element in your project if you want to copy it to the global template without overwriting the original element in the global template. You can’t rename some built-in elements. Fields are renamed in the Custom Fields dialog box.
Do the following to rename a customized element:
Open the project that contains the element that you want to rename.
Click Tools, Organizer to open the Organizer dialog box.
Click the tab for the type of element that you want to rename.
In the <Element> Available In box on the right side of the dialog box, click the project that contains the element you want to rename.
<Element> stands for the name of the current tab.
Click the name of the element in the list of elements on the right side of the dialog box.
Click Rename.
The Rename dialog box appears.
Type the new name for the element.
If you forget that changes you make to a table in a view modify that table’s definition, you might customize a standard table accidentally. You can reverse the changes you made, but if you made a lot of changes before you realized your mistake, it’s easier to restore the standard table. You can restore standard elements by using the Organizer to copy them from the global template into your active project.
Follow these steps to restore a standard element:
Open the project to which you want to restore a standard element.
Click Tools, Organizer to open the Organizer dialog box.
Click the tab for the type of element that you want to restore.
In the <Element> Available In box on the right side of the dialog box, click the project to which you want to restore the standard element.
<Element> stands for the name of the current tab. The global template appears on the left side of the dialog box by default.
Click the name of the element you want to restore in the list of elements in the global template on the left side of the dialog box.
Click Copy. When the confirmation dialog box appears asking you to confirm that you want to replace the element in the project, click Yes.
3.133.123.34