One very usefull feature not seen in any |
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JGranborg
Newbie Joined: 18 May 2005 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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Posted: 18 May 2005 at 5:16am |
During our development of a booking system to the health care in denmark, we have been constantely looking after a dayview that could display the day with different resolution, for different periods during the day. When you look at your calendar it is nice to see that you have free time for a patient. During the morning you have controls each taking 10 minutes but during the afternoon you have children controls which take ½ an hour. So something like a dayview with periods each with its own resolution (lines per hour)
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Jørgen Granborg
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SuperMario
Admin Group Joined: 14 February 2004 Status: Offline Points: 18057 |
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I'm not sure if this is what you are loking for, but the TimeScale in
the Calendar Control allows you to view the day in 5, 6, 10, 15, 30,
and 60 intervals. You could easily switch the intervals during
runtime.
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JGranborg
Newbie Joined: 18 May 2005 Location: Denmark Status: Offline Points: 4 |
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I know, but thats not what I want. Between 8 and 10 the doctors see patients every 10 minutes because of that it is nice with 10 minutes intervals between 8 and 10 but between 10 and 12 they see patients for journal take and because of that they have 30 min intervals, between 10 and 12. So different count of lines in each hour depending on the time of day. A very usefull feature of a dayview, an nobody, not even Microsoft has impelmented it.
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Jørgen Granborg
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sserge
Moderator Group Joined: 01 December 2004 Status: Offline Points: 1297 |
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Hi Jørgen,
For the moment we haven't this feature in the control available, but thanks for the suggestion!, we believe that this feature would be useful and we will implement it with the next version update. BTW, please clarify whether are you talking about increasing a number of lines in the hours of the same width, or about an increasing of the total width of some hours by changing their resolution intervals? Second variant is more complex -- look at the attached picture. -- WBR, Serge |
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