Thank you so much, Tom!!!
While adding the Javascript to the question to hide it worked, it left me with an unintended consequence. There is a line for each question that's hidden. I can convince my survey requestor to ignore these lines (5 lines from 5 hidden questions), but was wondering if anyone knows of a way to get rid of them? Thank you!!
Thank you for this solution! This works great!!
Thank you for the thread! This was most informative.
Thank you for the insights, Kate!!
If you have 60 minutes (metaphorically speaking) to answer a question, spend 50 minutes analyzing the question, rephrasing it even. At the end of the 50 minutes, if you still haven't found the answer to your question, spend the next 10 minutes to mentally prepare yourself to move on. You've done everything you can.I'm not where or when I read this, but this is my guiding principle in life.
I changed that too 🙂
ahmedA sorry to keep tagging you! I figured out what I was doing wrong. Simply using the "Transpose Table" was not the right thing to do. I physically had to change the Statements to Scale Points (and vice-versa). I took your words quite literally, not realizing that's not what you mean. Thanks again for your help!!
ahmedA I followed your advice, and it still doesn't seem to be working for me. Do you have any thoughts on what the issue could be this time?This is the question image...This is the image of the survey...Thank you again for your help!
Thank you for your insights into this topic, ahmedA. I will take your idea back to my business user.
rondev thank you for making me open my eyes and really look at the picture I posted here 😀This makes total sense and answers my question! Thank you again!
I figured out a way to make this work, but only with Form Entry type questions. My JavaScript knowledge is close to 0, so all I could do is copy/paste the JS code from a different page that I found. I edited the code to time zones. You would add this code to the addOnReady part of the JS code area. This code works if the Form Field is the first option. If the placement of this field on the form is different, one would have to change the number in the jQuery("#"+that+" .InputText:eq(Field Positiion - 1)").hide();This part of the code occurs in three lines of the total code.var that=this.questionId; var element="\\ (GMT-10:00) Hawaii\\ (GMT-09:00) Alaska\\ (GMT-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada)\\ (GMT-07:00) Arizona\\ (GMT-07:00) Mountain Time (US & Canada)\\ (GMT-06:00) Central Time (US & Canada)\\ (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada)\\ (GMT-05:00) Indiana (East)\\ "; jQuery(element).insertAfter("#"+that+" .InputText:eq(0)"); jQuery("#"+that+" .InputText:eq(0)").hide(); jQuery("
My apologies, this doesn't work the way I was hoping it would. It simply displays a drop-down of the different time zones, but it does not carry over the user's selection into the survey results. If and when I figure out how to accomplish this, I will update this thread. Sorry to get your hopes high.
EllenW I found this a way to do this using HTML code. Copy/paste this as Add this as a Descriptive Text question. I wasn't able to add time zones for the rest of the world as it went above the character count limit. If you need the full list, you can search "create timezone dropdown html" in google and you'll find the full list. Hope this helps (even though it's a few months late 😀)Time Zone (GMT-10:00) Hawaii (GMT-09:00) Alaska (GMT-08:00) Pacific Time (US & Canada) (GMT-07:00) Arizona (GMT-07:00) Mountain Time (US & Canada) (GMT-06:00) Central Time (US & Canada) (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time (US & Canada) (GMT-05:00) Indiana (East)
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