Modify iCal events in 10.5 via drag-and-drop Liberal KS

Use drag-and-drop to (somewhat) ease the task of editing events in the 10.5 version of iCal

Local Companies

Sunflower Electric Supply Inc
(620) 624-6278
101 E 2nd St
Liberal, KS
Kriz-Davis Co
(316) 945-1313
3800 W Dora St
Wichita, KS
Locke Wholesale Electric Supply
(620) 235-0685
202 E 29th St
Pittsburg, KS
American Electric Co
(785) 823-7161
1103 W South St
Salina, KS
Locke Supply
(316) 942-2880
1031 S West St
Wichita, KS
Graber's Ace Hardware
(316) 283-1900
208 W Broadway St
Newton, KS
Delstar Products
(913) 438-2383
13706 W 81st Ter
Shawnee Msn, KS
Lakeland Engineering Equipment Co.
(316) 267-4200
4033 N Woodlawn Ct
Bel Aire, KS
Big A Wholesale Supply
(316) 320-1820
605 State St
El Dorado, KS
R C Sales Co
(913) 888-5566
13606 W 107th St
Shawnee Mission, KS

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As much as I dislike the event info window in OS X 10.5's version of iCal-I dislike it enough that it made my list of Leopard annoyances-anything I can do to make working with that window simpler is a win in my book. In that vein, today's hint will allow you to do make some basic modifications to an event without opening the event's editing window. Instead, you can use drag-and-drop.

First double-click the event you'd like to modify. But instead of clicking Edit, try using drag and drop. You can drag and drop a file from the Finder, and it will be added as an attachment to the event. Drag and drop a person (or more than one person, or even a group) from Address Book, and they'll be added as attendees. Drag in a URL, and it's added as a (clickable) URL. Drag and drop some text, and it's added as a note.

If your event has existing attendees, the newly-dragged people will be added to the list. If the event has a clickable URL, it will be replaced by the dropped URL. If you've got an existing note, however, your dropped text will "spring back" and not be accepted by the window in iCal.

Until (hopefully!) Apple fixes the mess it made of iCal's event input in OS X 10.6, little tips like this can make things a bit simpler-still far from ideal, but a bit more bearable.


Read article at Macworld.com

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