Colour-coding and colour effects

By making use of colours in your schedule, the planning becomes more clearly arranged, and you can focus attention on important issues. With Rostar CAS, you can use colour in different ways.

Give tasks and/or persons a colour


In the first place, you can give tasks a colour. Here is an example of what the persons schedule can look like.
In the same way, you can give persons a colour in the task schedule if they are sick, on holiday, or absent for another reason.

Introduce colour effects in ‘tricky’ locations


In the second place, Rostar CAS offers a range of colour effects. You can, for example, colour in the bottlenecks in your schedule, i.e. where less-qualified people are available for the task required. In this way, the planner’s attention is drawn to these ‘tricky’ parts in the schedule, before he/she schedules the rest. With another colour effect, you can see immediately which places are understaffed or overstaffed.

You can decide yourself how many colours you want to use in your schedule and which colours you want to use in which situation.