Do not input private or sensitive data. View Qlik Privacy & Cookie Policy.
Skip to main content

Announcements
Discover how organizations are unlocking new revenue streams: Watch here
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
Anonymous
Not applicable

tXMLMap: moving elements up and down

Hi everyone,
Am I missing something or is it impossible to move a sub-element (for example in a header section) move up or down after creating it? It just end up right at the bottom, and since I forgot to add this element before creating the others, my only option is to create everything from scratch.
0683p000009MEtf.png
I marked the field in my screenshot and I have so far been unable to move it.
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
Cihan
Labels (2)
8 Replies
Anonymous
Not applicable
Author

Anyone? I'm really reluctant to build the whole tree from scratch everytime a new fields gets added... It must be somehow possible.
Anonymous
Not applicable
Author

the yellow arrow doesn't fit your need ?
0683p000009MErV.png
regards
Anonymous
Not applicable
Author

0683p000009MEtk.png
My arrows are greyed out unfortunately. Is your screenshot from a tXMLMap as well?
Anonymous
Not applicable
Author

yes 0683p000009MACn.png
Seems you're on a read only permissions .
0683p000009MEtp.png
Anonymous
Not applicable
Author

Hmmm, ok. Any idea on how that can be disabled?
Thanks for the help, by the way.
Anonymous
Not applicable
Author

Wait, my type is set to "Document" so that I can use a few other txmlmap options. Maybe it has something to do with that.
Anonymous
Not applicable
Author

for my test I have use Document type to read it , define the schema input for tMap calling a file (xsd) and drag&drop element to output.
regards
Anonymous
Not applicable
Author

For anyone interested in this issue. The only way I found to move an element up and down in an already defined XML tree was editing your job .item file, directly in the workspace (while having the job closed), and cut+paste the part of the XML definition elsewhere in the tree structure.
Ugly but effective.