Apps and Installations
Have a question about a Dropbox app or installation? Reach out to the Dropbox Community and get solutions, help, and advice from members.
Now it is impossible to move rows or columns in a table.
The shortcut ctrl+shift+up/down does not work on tables for moving rows (it works on usual paragraphs). Actually a more standard shortcut is shift+alt+up/down (not sure why you have chosen ctrl instead of alt) -- I think it is better because ctrl is usually used for selection.
The most important feature is moving rows. At least by using keyboard shortcut: ctrl+shift+up/down (or alt).
Second priority is moving columns. At least by using keyboard shortcut: ctrl+shift+left/right (or alt).
Alternatively using drag&drop (I personally like keyboard shortcuts).
BTW, a little bit more testing showed that you have a cosmetic bug right now in tables.
How to reproduce:
1) create table
2) in one of the cells enter three lines of text
3) place cursor to the third line
4) press ctrl+shift+up or down multiple times
ER: consistent behaviour: whether selection or moving of text lines happens
AR: inconsistent behavior: both actions are triggered: selection and move of lines
So, basically, moving text lines conflicts with moving rows in table. Different tools handle this differently:
Microsoft Word: alt+shift+up/down will move rows in table (not text lines within same row)
Microsoft OneNote: (THE BEST) they are very intellectual. If you select first line of text in a table row and press alt+shift+up, then the whole row is moved. If you select not first line of text --- then this line of text first will be moved within row and when it becomes the first, then the whole row starts to move. In general Microsoft OneNote is very nice and stable tool which I recommend to take into account. Just imagine how many throusands of man-years Microsoft has spent on conceptualization and stabilization of OneNote. Re-use it aggressively!
Google Document: (buggy) moves lines of texts only (never rows), and when line is the last in the row then it starts to travel to next column (not row!!), and sometimes it results in very buggy behaviour like damaging the table (few times it even damaged the document and I had to restore older version). So dont use alt+shift+up/down in tables of google document.
Atlassian Confluence: it does not support alt+shift+up/down. This shortcut in table inserts empty rows. However they have a special shortcut for cut and paste rows in table. I use it for reorganizing rows in table. Not very nice, but better than nothing.
Hello @Andrei L.2,
We really appreciate your detailed feedback and updates on this, definately passing it on to the Paper team!
Thank you!
Zed
Community Moderator @ Dropbox
https://dropbox.com/support
Did this post help you? If so please mark it for some Kudos below.
Did this post fix your issue/answer your question? If so please press the 'Accept as Solution' button to help others find it.
Still stuck? Ask me a question! (Questions asked in the community will likely receive an answer within 4 hours!)
BTW, a little bit more testing showed that you have a cosmetic bug right now in tables.
How to reproduce:
1) create table
2) in one of the cells enter three lines of text
3) place cursor to the third line
4) press ctrl+shift+up or down multiple times
ER: consistent behaviour: whether selection or moving of text lines happens
AR: inconsistent behavior: both actions are triggered: selection and move of lines
So, basically, moving text lines conflicts with moving rows in table. Different tools handle this differently:
Microsoft Word: alt+shift+up/down will move rows in table (not text lines within same row)
Microsoft OneNote: (THE BEST) they are very intellectual. If you select first line of text in a table row and press alt+shift+up, then the whole row is moved. If you select not first line of text --- then this line of text first will be moved within row and when it becomes the first, then the whole row starts to move. In general Microsoft OneNote is very nice and stable tool which I recommend to take into account. Just imagine how many throusands of man-years Microsoft has spent on conceptualization and stabilization of OneNote. Re-use it aggressively!
Google Document: (buggy) moves lines of texts only (never rows), and when line is the last in the row then it starts to travel to next column (not row!!), and sometimes it results in very buggy behaviour like damaging the table (few times it even damaged the document and I had to restore older version). So dont use alt+shift+up/down in tables of google document.
Atlassian Confluence: it does not support alt+shift+up/down. This shortcut in table inserts empty rows. However they have a special shortcut for cut and paste rows in table. I use it for reorganizing rows in table. Not very nice, but better than nothing.
Yep, That would be a really handy feature 🙂 +1 for Andrei L.
I agress, OneNote really has an exemplary solution to this.
Hello @Andrei L.2,
We really appreciate your detailed feedback and updates on this, definately passing it on to the Paper team!
Thank you!
Zed
Community Moderator @ Dropbox
https://dropbox.com/support
Did this post help you? If so please mark it for some Kudos below.
Did this post fix your issue/answer your question? If so please press the 'Accept as Solution' button to help others find it.
Still stuck? Ask me a question! (Questions asked in the community will likely receive an answer within 4 hours!)
Hi there!
If you need more help you can view your support options (expected response time for a ticket is 24 hours), or contact us on Twitter or Facebook.
For more info on available support options, see this article.
If you found the answer to your question, please 'like' the post to say thanks to the user!