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.
Rob On 03/21/2011 08:14 PM, nan wich wrote: > 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. > > > /*Nancy*/ > > > > Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. -- Dr. Martin L. > King, Jr. > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > *From:* Rob Thorne > > I'm looking into a two tiered menu in a D7 application where the second > level of the menu is standard, but the top level is different for every > user. > > To make this concrete, suppose the user is a teacher at a school where > the teacher uses multiple rooms, and needs to order materials for each > room separately. Each teacher has a separate list of rooms, but the the > pages we track -- class lists, crafts inventory, furniture... are the > same for each room.
