No you don't quite read that right.
DEFAULT only comes into play if the argument is NOT PRESENT. If the argument is present (which it should be in most cases) it should use the specified date.
Dave
-----Original Message----- From: support-bounces@drupal.org [mailto:support-bounces@drupal.org] On Behalf Of Mark Syms Sent: Monday, January 31, 2011 11:02 AM To: Drupal Support Subject: [support] Couple of questions about calendar module
Hi, hope somebody can help me, been tearing my hair out.
I've been trying to build a calendar view for a specific and non-movable month that will show nodes of a selected type and display them based on the embedded CCK date field in the node.
Once I've got that I then want a second node type that is a descendant of the current node.
The reason for all this? I'm trying to put together a list of destinations and the events/activities that will happen at those locations for our honeymoon later this year. So the start/end times in the ancestor destination nodes will appear in the main calendar which then links to the display for the destination node which will include all the activities. I think this bit is probably easy and just needs a set of node references into the content of the node. Or is there a more sophisticated way of doing it with a view to show all the descendant nodes for this node?
I've tried Googling and searching Drupal.org for this but without much success and fiddling with the view settings has just resulted in an error,
"The Date argument in this view must be set up to provide a default value set to the current date. Edit the argument, find 'Action to take if argument is not present.', choose 'Provide default argument', then select 'Current date'."
Which If I read it right is saying that I must make the parameter "current date" which is the opposite to what I want.
Thanks for any help,
mark. -- [ Drupal support list | http://lists.drupal.org/ ]