I just looked again, it was just that their AJAX demos are done in RoR, not sure why that was enough to send me away to mooTools though. Especially that the mooTools site has very basic documentation with no demos. Well, I also read that mooTools was much smaller, but I don't have any more info than that.
-----Original Message----- From: Robertson-Ravo, Neil (RX) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, March 22, 2007 2:49 PM To: CF-Talk Subject: Re: OT JS - Moving elements in page Nah, Script.aclu.us can be used with anything. It is just included with RoR. "This e-mail is from Reed Exhibitions (Gateway House, 28 The Quadrant, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 1DN, United Kingdom), a division of Reed Business, Registered in England, Number 678540. It contains information which is confidential and may also be privileged. It is for the exclusive use of the intended recipient(s). If you are not the intended recipient(s) please note that any form of distribution, copying or use of this communication or the information in it is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful. If you have received this communication in error please return it to the sender or call our switchboard on +44 (0) 20 89107910. The opinions expressed within this communication are not necessarily those expressed by Reed Exhibitions." Visit our website at http://www.reedexpo.com -----Original Message----- From: Turetsky, Seth To: CF-Talk Sent: Thu Mar 22 18:40:18 2007 Subject: RE: OT JS - Moving elements in page I agree, this effect is done in all of these JS libs. I've been using mooTools lately, but that's just my preference. IMO, Script.aculo.us seems to cater solely to RoR(at least they did, haven't looked lately) -----Original Message----- From: Robertson-Ravo, Neil (RX) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, March 22, 2007 2:23 PM To: CF-Talk Subject: Re: OT JS - Moving elements in page What about using Prototype / Script.Aculo.Us? (or on all the other JS/DHTML libs) "This e-mail is from Reed Exhibitions (Gateway House, 28 The Quadrant, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 1DN, United Kingdom), a division of Reed Business, Registered in England, Number 678540. It contains information which is confidential and may also be privileged. It is for the exclusive use of the intended recipient(s). If you are not the intended recipient(s) please note that any form of distribution, copying or use of this communication or the information in it is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful. If you have received this communication in error please return it to the sender or call our switchboard on +44 (0) 20 89107910. The opinions expressed within this communication are not necessarily those expressed by Reed Exhibitions." Visit our website at http://www.reedexpo.com -----Original Message----- From: Brian Swartzfager To: CF-Talk Sent: Thu Mar 22 18:08:26 2007 Subject: Re: OT JS - Moving elements in page >Anyone have any pointers or examples of DHTML ordering? Will it be a >case of >deleting and reinserting elements where needed? I messed around with doing something similar a lot lately, and I came up with two different approaches: If the elements you want to "move" only contain one or two simple elements (like text or hyperlinks), you can simply swap the text or values of those child elements instead of actually moving the position of the elements in the DOM hierarchy. I actually just made a UI tool that does just that in the Downloads box on the right-hand side of my blog (there's a working example on that download page as well): http://www.swartzfager.org/blog ........the purpose of the tool is really to _record_ the rearrangement of the elements (usually the elements of a list or table), not just visually rearrange them, but the JS techniques are the same. It works in all the major browsers (including Safari). The other approach is more like what you did with your reorder.html: I had to build a bookmark portlet for our portal system, and I wanted users to not only be able to nest bookmarks and folders, but to be able to reorder two folders at the same level in the hierarchy...which meant moving all of the bookmarks and folders contained in the folder. I ended up writing some functions that would clone the elements, remove the original elements, and then place the clones in the proper position of the document by figuring out which page element the clone should appear before and then using the insertBefore method. It works in Netscape, IE, FireFox, and Opera, but not in Safari: one of the functions involves reassigning element ids and Safari doesn't seem to like that for whatever reason. If you're interested in seeing the code for the second approach, I could probably clean it up for public consumption. -- Brian Swartzfager [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.swartzfager.org/blog ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~| Create Web Applications With ColdFusion MX7 & Flex 2. Build powerful, scalable RIAs. Free Trial http://www.adobe.com/products/coldfusion/flex2/?sdid=RVJS Archive: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Talk/message.cfm/messageid:273411 Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/CF-Talk/subscribe.cfm Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=11502.10531.4

