IDs are assigned according to the stack ID which increments by 1 every time an 
object is created. So yes, the stack ID is like an auto increment column in 
SQL. It assures that no two objects get the same ID, and the last object 
created is the highest ID in the stack. 

Sent from my iPhone

> On May 25, 2024, at 07:50, Klaus major-k via use-livecode 
> <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi jbv,
> 
>> Am 25.05.2024 um 16:20 schrieb jbv via use-livecode 
>> <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com>:
>> 
>> Hi list,
>> 
>> I have a script that creates groups on the fly
>> with the command "group". These groups contain
>> various flds and imgs.
>> Can I always assume that the group with the highest
>> id # is the last one created ?
> 
> sounds logical, but I'm not sure, maybe you could store the ID of the last 
> group somewhere.
> Use IT right after the groupd command:
> ...
> select this_and_that
> group
> put IT into the_id_of_just_created_group
> ...
> 
>> Thanks,
>> jbv
> 
> Best
> 
> Klaus
> 
> --
> Klaus Major
> https://www.major-k.de
> https://www.major-k.de/bass
> kl...@major-k.de
> 
> 
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