Hi,
I want to insert 'Tree Format/Strucure' in Editor.
How to enable this facility?
Any Idea?
TIA,
Best Regards,
Ravi
What's tree format/structure?
Ravi, would it have something to do with this? Admin is a block, sure, and I have always thought of admin tree as an expression to describe the folder structure. I saw that post and I am stumped as to what it might mean. Can you please provide us with some more of your thoughts on this?
Hi Everybody,
Thanks for responses.
This page is nearer to my point. I am trying.
http://docs.moodle.org/20/en/FreeMind_filter
Ravi
The folder is created in the /filters folder. It has to be done manually, like any 3rd party block or plugin - so yo uneed access to the source code.
The way it is written in the documentation is a little unclear, being a bit long winded. I don't think you actually need any coding to make it work, though. Essentially, download the plugin and put it into Moodle. Download the program and install it, then create your mind map and save it as an .mm file. Create the page and add in the link to the image in the usual manner. Upload the file to Moodle and it should display. There seems somethig a little trickey about using the image in a browser, but the documentation would suggest it could be used in Moodle without further addins required.
Good luck...
Thanks again Colin,
I want to insert 'FlowChart'/ 'Mindmap'/TreeChart' in HTML editor.
Is it possible?
Is there any plugin for TinyMCE Editor?
TIA,
Ravi
Not in the standard (http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/Plugins). There may be third party plugins but you need to search especially if you're thinking about embedded flowchart etc. object in the html editor. Alternately, if the particular object is embeddable by html code (like youtube embedding) you could paste the code into the editor in html mode. hth
Itamar would be correct, as long as you have installed the filter, you can embed it into the page just like you would an image or a video. Alternatively, you can create the mind map, take a screen grab of it and save that as an image for inclusion as an image. I have done that with files that Moodle does not handle well. (However, I tend now to make sure that the file types I am using are compatible for direct inclusion these days, just makes life simpler.)