![]() ![]() I want to set it up as a table to make it easier for the administrator to change the default year when the term changes. On the login screen in the background, look up the table, grab the info I need, declare it as global variable. My brain is thinking create a table for default term/school year. I need to default the school year and term.This is so incredibly helpful, making steady progress. Just remember that when you press teh menu items, they apps linked to them will load in the iframe of that menu. One last thing - the containers can be the default app for the menu - or they can also contain the menu. So you can get the core of the system working, then go back and work on version 2 which is more of a repackaging. The reason I say just get it working with as simple a menuing system as you can start with, is that SC apps are very easy to put into new menus and even containers. Once in a while I end up looking at the generated code (with notepad++) or similar IDE, but only if I am encountering “bugs” (99% mine own fault, but 1% SC bugs I then report). Whatever you do, do it within the SC project context - no editing generated code. So far, I have not encountered anything I could not build using SC and some code in events. It is so easy to get busted at the beginning on trying to get all sorts of complex effects. Start using the stock menus and such, and get something to work. I think the best advice I can give, based on the complex stuff I am into now, is start very basic and build. You may have different side menus for different top menu items. The side vertical menu is teh default app for the first menu. When you have a setup like the example, your menu (horizontal) must be what app taht gets loaded at login. You can force things back and forth to communicate between container columns, but I would advise to keep it simple at first - just use the menus. The menus each have a built in iframe for any content it needs to load up - it uses that iframe. I just tried a lot of ways till i got look and function i was happy with. It has a lot of options for messing with the way thungs look. You can also load up a global variable with an image with html and so on, then use that in the app titles. play with your code, possibly using a blank app to displsy an image in that upper left? use html and style in the tag to get width the way you want so no scroll. You can also reverse that and have a vertical main menu, with horizonral submenus.Īs far as the scroll bars and titles, dont put a title on widget. you can also get cool effects by have a top menu as horizontal, with vertical sub menus. That way your other apps loaded by one or two menus all fall in the built in menu iframe below it. ![]() When you want the submenu line, that menu app will be called by a menu item of the top menu, so both show as you have but not in two widgets, only one. Your right column should have a top menu app as the ONLY widget, taking up whole right side. I suggest you think of the container as columns. Those squares u can get rid of in your widget settings, i think you have expandable or something set yes. ![]() I haved used sc to get something similar using container first, then menu. ![]()
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