From: Nick H. <nic...@ho...> - 2010-10-31 20:10:06
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Peter, OK. That is an extra field. I haven't thought about this in any detail yet. Nick. Peter Landgren wrote: > Nick, > > Sounds good! > > For Sweden I could think of a structure like (I use the field names from Gramps32): > > Country > State > City > Church parish > > In Swedish: > Land > Län > Kommun/Stad > Församling > > /Peter > > > >> Peter, >> >> Yes, I am planning to this. >> >> Most of my places are in England and I don't use the State field for >> these. I makes sense to ignore this field in the hierarchy for the tree >> view. >> >> Country -> County and Country -> County -> City would be the most useful >> hierarchies. >> >> The place tree model code isn't easy to make generic, which is why I >> haven't done it already. :) >> >> We haven't even finalised the interface yet. >> >> The plan is to have a country table which would store the field names >> for each country. This table could also hold the levels that should be >> displayed in the tree in the place tree view. The place tree view could >> be made to display only one country at a time. The country could be >> selected from a drop-down list or maybe from the filter sidebar. This >> would remove the country level from the tree altogether. >> >> One alternative would be to display all countries in the same view. We >> could just remove the empty fields from the hierarchy. I could do this >> before we created a country table. >> >> I could create some add-on views. They would be the same as the standard >> place tree view but use different models. I don't think that this would >> be a practical long-term solution though. >> >> What are your thoughts on this? What levels of hierarchy do you want in >> the tree? >> >> Regards, >> >> >> Nick. >> >> Peter Landgren wrote: >> >>> (I used the wrong headline a moment ago!) >>> >>> Hi, >>> >>> Would it possible to let the user define the two lower levels in "Place >>> Tree View"? The top level is naturally Country. >>> >>> I think this order is very dependent of country and how users have used >>> the place fields. >>> >>> /Peter >>> > > > |