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edx
edx-platform
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a6f87dcf
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a6f87dcf
authored
Jan 16, 2013
by
Alexander Kryklia
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docs/source/drag_and_drop_input.rst
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a6f87dcf
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@@ -42,6 +42,8 @@ attributes::
id - Unique identifier of the draggable object.
label - Human readable label that will be shown to the user.
icon - Relative path to an image that will be shown to the user.
can_reuse - true or false, default is false. If true, same draggable can be
used multiple times.
A draggable is what the user must drag out of the slider and place onto the
base image. After a drag operation, if the center of the draggable ends up
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@@ -81,6 +83,129 @@ the slider.
If no targets are provided, then a draggable can be dragged and placed anywhere
on the base image.
correct answer format
---------------------
There are two correct answer formats: short and long
If short from correct answer is mapping of 'draggable_id' to 'target_id'::
correct_answer = {'grass': [[300, 200], 200], 'ant': [[500, 0], 200]}
correct_answer = {'name4': 't1', '7': 't2'}
In long form correct answer is list of dicts. Every dict has 3 keys:
draggables, targets and rule. For example::
correct_answer = [
{
'draggables': ['7', '8'],
'targets': ['t5_c', 't6_c'],
'rule': 'anyof'
},
{
'draggables': ['1', '2'],
'targets': ['t2_h', 't3_h', 't4_h', 't7_h', 't8_h', 't10_h'],
'rule': 'anyof'
}]
Draggables is list of draggables id. Target is list of targets id, draggables
must be dragged to with considering rule. Rule is string.
Draggables in dicts inside correct_answer list must not intersect.
Wrong (for draggable id 7)::
correct_answer = [
{
'draggables': ['7', '8'],
'targets': ['t5_c', 't6_c'],
'rule': 'anyof'
},
{
'draggables': ['7', '2'],
'targets': ['t2_h', 't3_h', 't4_h', 't7_h', 't8_h', 't10_h'],
'rule': 'anyof'
}]
Rules are: exact, anyof, unorderly_equal, anyof+number, unorderly_equal+number
- Exact rule means that targets for draggable id's in user_answer are the same
that targets from correct answer. For example, for draggables 7 and 8 user must
drag 7 to target1 and 8 to target2 if correct_answer is::
correct_answer = [
{
'draggables': ['7', '8'],
'targets': ['tartget1', 'target2'],
'rule': 'exact'
}]
- Unorderly_equal rule allows draggables be dragged to targets unorderly. If one
want to allow for student to drag 7 to target1 or target2 and 8 to target2 or
target 1 and 7 and 8 must be in different targets, then correct answer must be::
correct_answer = [
{
'draggables': ['7', '8'],
'targets': ['tartget1', 'target2'],
'rule': 'unorderly_equal'
}]
- Anyof rule allows draggables to be dragged to any of targets. If one want to
allow for student to drag 7 and 8 to target1 or target2, which means that if 7
is on target1 and 8 is on target1 or 7 on target2 and 8 on target2 or 7 on
target1 and 8 on target2. Any of theese are correct which anyof rule::
correct_answer = [
{
'draggables': ['7', '8'],
'targets': ['tartget1', 'target2'],
'rule': 'anyof'
}]
- If you have can_reuse true, then you, for example, have draggables a,b,c and 10
targets. These will allow you to drag 4 'a' draggables to
['target1', 'target4', 'target7', 'target10'] , you do not need to write 'a'
four times. Also this will allow you to drag 'b' draggable to target2 or target5
or target5 and target2 etc..::
correct_answer = [
{
'draggables': ['a'],
'targets': ['target1', 'target4', 'target7', 'target10'],
'rule': 'unorderly_equal'
},
{
'draggables': ['b'],
'targets': ['target2', 'target5', 'target8'],
'rule': 'anyof'
},
{
'draggables': ['c'],
'targets': ['target3', 'target6', 'target9'],
'rule': 'unorderly_equal'
}]
And sometimes you want to allow drag only two 'b' draggables, in these case
you sould use 'anyof+number' of 'unordered_equal+number' rule::
correct_answer = [
{
'draggables': ['a', 'a', 'a'],
'targets': ['target1', 'target4', 'target7'],
'rule': 'unorderly_equal+numbers'
},
{
'draggables': ['b', 'b'],
'targets': ['target2', 'target5', 'target8'],
'rule': 'anyof+numbers'
},
{
'draggables': ['c'],
'targets': ['target3', 'target6', 'target9'],
'rule': 'unorderly_equal'
}]
Example
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