Hi Kevin, hi all.
After a couple of tries I've realised that despite maybe not being the
most elegant way of doing it, this can be done by modifying
/opt/rt3/local/plugins/RTx-EmailCompletion/lib/RTx/EmailCompletion/Ldap.pm.
However I seem to have a "strange" issue.
One step at a time. Wher
On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 04:37:32PM +, Giuseppe Sollazzo wrote:
> On 25/02/11 15:28, Kevin Falcone wrote:
> >It shouldn't actually require any JS hacking (or didn't when I last
> >overrode this extension to do it).
> >
>
> Hi Kevin,
> thanks - I'll give it a look.
>
> >You have to hack search
On 25/02/11 15:28, Kevin Falcone wrote:
It shouldn't actually require any JS hacking (or didn't when I last
overrode this extension to do it).
Hi Kevin,
thanks - I'll give it a look.
You have to hack search in the .pm to return extra data about the user
and the EmailCompletion mason template
On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 08:19:27AM -0600, Kenneth Marshall wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 11:17:02AM +, Giuseppe Sollazzo wrote:
> > Hi all,
> > we've been using RTx::EmailCompletion for a while very successfully. This
> > is an extension that allows the user to see a pop down display of e-m
On Fri, Feb 25, 2011 at 11:17:02AM +, Giuseppe Sollazzo wrote:
> Hi all,
> we've been using RTx::EmailCompletion for a while very successfully. This
> is an extension that allows the user to see a pop down display of e-mail
> addresses upon insertion of a minimum number of characters.
>
> The
Hi all,
we've been using RTx::EmailCompletion for a while very successfully.
This is an extension that allows the user to see a pop down display of
e-mail addresses upon insertion of a minimum number of characters.
The search is made on a number of parameters you can specify (in our
case, e-m