Some general information about fermentation time and what is going on in there:
The mash temperature kind of defines the composition of the fermentables in the wort. Mash long and low and the wort will be very fermentable, meaning a high percentage will be shorter sugar molecules, glucose being the shortest. These are relatively easy to metabolize so any yeast can digest them fairly quickly.
Longer chained sugars like maltose or maltotriose or even dextrins are relatively difficult to metabolize, that es why these might take more time or some yeasts do not even have the possibility to digest them at all. Also, some yeasts can digest a portion of these, by utilising shorter sugars as an energy source to acitvely munch on the longer sugars. But as soon as the shorter sugars are out, they will slowly stop feeding on the longer ones.
And then there are diastatic yeasts. They produce an anzyme that they excrete which chops down longer sugars into shorter ones. This takes time. A little enzyme goes a long way over time, meaning that these yeasts often convert literally all of the remaining sugars given enough time, but this can take weeks or months. Sometimes these yeasts look like they are done but they are sloooowly munching on the sugars that are still being converted sloooowly into shorter sugars.
This is obviously all also temperature dependent. The higher the temperature, the faster the metabolization of the sugars, until it is too high for the yeast. But at the higher end, also unwanted byproducts are increased, like fusel alcohols and unwanted esters. So we try to stick to a good temperature window, mainly around 18 C for ales, +-3 degrees (depending on the yeast).
You see, there are several factors that somehow influence the possible length of a fermentation till the sugars are all metabolized that the specific yeast can digest. As long as you do not use yeasts that are strange in their behaviour, like windsor sometimes is, or ringwood, and as long as you are not creating extra strong worts, you are good to go with 2 weeks in the fermenter and then bottling. It will not hurt if you bottle one week later, as long as the fermenter is air tight. I have bottled beer as early as 6 days after fermentation, some of them worked, some were too early but if I look at all of these early bottled batches, I must say, it was not worth it. Too many batches had problems afterwards with either too much yeast in the bottle or overcarbonation, that I would not recommend doing it, also not with Kveik which can be done in a redicoulously fast time at higher temperatures (2 days at 37 degrees, do not try that with a normal yeast! this is kveik only territory!). So I repeat what the others already said, and most of us had to learn the hard way, including my impatient self
Patience is a virtue!
I hope this clears things up further.