Le 11 janv. 2011 à 18:21, Bob Sneidar a écrit :

> Thanks Mark that clears a lot of things up. I found that by getting the short 
> name of the source and destination, I can tell what column in each I am 
> dragging from and to. 
> 
> One thing that would have been nice would have been to get a single column of 
> data in a data grid with multiple columns. In fact, a command that gave me a 
> column in ANY list or array would have been nice, but I know I will have to 
> roll my own. Not a problem, just inconvenient. 
> 
> My goal is to drop a value onto a column in a multicolumn grid and have the 
> value placed after the last value in that column. Picture something like 
> Filemaker's data import dialog, where you can drag fields from the source and 
> destination into a "merge table" and define the action by clicking a center 
> column. That is what I am working on. 
> 
> While it's fun, I find myself spending an inordinate amount of time figuring 
> out just how datagrids work, and how to implement drag and drop between them. 
> Still, it's not time wasted, it's time spent getting an education. :-)
> 


Bonjour Bob,

If you don't know it, you could catch a glance to "Experiment 015 - Drag & 
drop^in DG" from TheSlug here on his site:

http://www.aslugontheroad.co.cc/index.php?option=com_content&view=section&layout=blog&id=6&Itemid=53

under "Experiments 012 to 016: Datagrids experiments"

Seems possible to modify the scripts in order to drag only one value of a row 
of a Dg and drop it onto another Dg.

Sure TheSlug would know how to do that far better than me ;-))

Best regards from Grenoble

André
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