Rearrange follow up responses / group based on selections / create sub-responses directly
Sorry this is going to be confusing to write. Currently if I were to have a select multiple box as the main task response and then wanted to make each possible response have an “add follow up” split there’s no direct way to relate the follow ups to different possible responses. The only way to do this is to add more “add follow up”s and then relate it to the “includes”. This is where I’m running into an issue. Say I made 3 possible main responses (lets call them A, B, and C) and wanted to branch from each response, the only way to do this is to rename the sub-response something relative to the 3 main possible responses (A-a,A-b,A-c,B-a,B-b,etc). Now when you want more sub-responses to each main response it adds to the list bottom. So if I were to say make A, B, C, then A-a, B-a, then A-b, B-b; A-b would fall to the bottom of the list when selecting both the main responses A and B. It would show it “out of order” when selecting multiple. The simple fixes would be allowing the user to move where the response split falls in the total optional list, or to allow direct nested sub-splits (similar to a comment chain). In the attached what happened was I made Aggression (Staff) - Amount of Times, then Aggression (Peers) - Amount of times, then Aggression (Staff) - Antecedent, issue is the only way to reorder it as it stands right now is to delete all options and then re-create them in the desired order. As in this example one would want Aggression (Staff) - Amount of Times and Aggression (Staff) - Antecedent grouped together.

Sean Gilmore 19 days ago
Rearrange follow up responses / group based on selections / create sub-responses directly
Sorry this is going to be confusing to write. Currently if I were to have a select multiple box as the main task response and then wanted to make each possible response have an “add follow up” split there’s no direct way to relate the follow ups to different possible responses. The only way to do this is to add more “add follow up”s and then relate it to the “includes”. This is where I’m running into an issue. Say I made 3 possible main responses (lets call them A, B, and C) and wanted to branch from each response, the only way to do this is to rename the sub-response something relative to the 3 main possible responses (A-a,A-b,A-c,B-a,B-b,etc). Now when you want more sub-responses to each main response it adds to the list bottom. So if I were to say make A, B, C, then A-a, B-a, then A-b, B-b; A-b would fall to the bottom of the list when selecting both the main responses A and B. It would show it “out of order” when selecting multiple. The simple fixes would be allowing the user to move where the response split falls in the total optional list, or to allow direct nested sub-splits (similar to a comment chain). In the attached what happened was I made Aggression (Staff) - Amount of Times, then Aggression (Peers) - Amount of times, then Aggression (Staff) - Antecedent, issue is the only way to reorder it as it stands right now is to delete all options and then re-create them in the desired order. As in this example one would want Aggression (Staff) - Amount of Times and Aggression (Staff) - Antecedent grouped together.

Sean Gilmore 19 days ago
Real-time notifications for live class delays or cancellations
I want a notification system (push, email, or in-app alert) that notifies users when live classes (like dance parties) are going to run late or are cancelled. Currently, we have waited for 15 minutes on multiple occasions without knowing if the class would happen, which wastes time we could spend on other activities. Having a real-time alert would help us manage our schedule better.

Lesli Colestock 3 months ago
Real-time notifications for live class delays or cancellations
I want a notification system (push, email, or in-app alert) that notifies users when live classes (like dance parties) are going to run late or are cancelled. Currently, we have waited for 15 minutes on multiple occasions without knowing if the class would happen, which wastes time we could spend on other activities. Having a real-time alert would help us manage our schedule better.

Lesli Colestock 3 months ago