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It's not really upside-down for my exact use case, which is actual a
financial application -- people actually would want to see their
accounts at the top level, and everyone of course has different
accounts.<br>
<br>
Rob<br>
<br>
On 03/21/2011 08:14 PM, nan wich wrote:
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<div>Are you dead set on doing this upside down? It might be
easier to turn your second level menu into the first level and
the rooms into the second level. It might make more sense to
the users too. Then rooms can just be permissioned and the
menu will work very easily with no mucking around.<br>
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<p><font size="4" color="#ff007f" face="bookman old style, new
york, times, serif"><em><strong>Nancy</strong></em></font></p>
<p> </p>
<p><font face="arial, helvetica, sans-serif">Injustice anywhere
is a threat to justice everywhere. -- Dr. Martin L. King,
Jr.</font></p>
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<div style="font-family: Courier
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Rob Thorne</font></div>
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I'm looking into a two tiered menu in a D7 application where
the second<br>
level of the menu is standard, but the top level is
different for every<br>
user.<br>
<br>
To make this concrete, suppose the user is a teacher at a
school where<br>
the teacher uses multiple rooms, and needs to order
materials for each<br>
room separately. Each teacher has a separate list of rooms,
but the the<br>
pages we track -- class lists, crafts inventory,
furniture... are the<br>
same for each room.<br>
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