Hi there, @ Chris: this is exactly what Draggables/Droppables does. When picking up a draggable, each possible droppable is measured and there is even a option that the droppables are highlighted during the drag.
Stefan and me already know that this kind of architecture is great for some but not all cases, especially when it comes to performance critical applications, having a lot of droppables. As I'm working on a critical project (an email application) right now that uses Interface, we are already thinking of ways of improving the architecture of both Draggables/Droppables. I'll keep you updated! -Paul 2006/11/25, Chris Domigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > Felix, I'm using the Drag and Drop plugin for an almost identical project. > I've found that when I display several months at a time, ie alot of <ul>'s, > performance gets very very sluggish like you mention. > > I think it's because when you "pick up" a draggable, the script has to go > through each <ul> and initialise it to support droppable behaviour. At least > that's my theory... > > Chris > > _______________________________________________ > jQuery mailing list > [email protected] > http://jquery.com/discuss/ > > > -- Paul Bakaus Web Developer ------------------------ Hildastr. 35 79102 Freiburg _______________________________________________ jQuery mailing list [email protected] http://jquery.com/discuss/
