You can copy and paste-special with the "Transpose" option checked. You'll need to clear out the destination space first (by moving things around or whatever).
'Trash'
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!
Transpose! Huzzah!
OK, I am having a weird asp/browser error I can't figure out.
eta: Nebber mind.
I was sure there wasn't client-side Javascript that modified that button. Sure but wrong.
Relatedly, has anyone seen a case where the html source (on the client) is not accurate?
Not accurate, how? I've noticed that if you're viewing an ajaxified site with Firefox, viewing the page source will give you different results from selecting some text and viewing the selection source. The former gives you what the page would look like when you reload it, while the latter gives you its current state.
Not accurate in that I screwed up (see post 10137). Like you said, if you use client-side Javascript to, say, modify the properties of some HTML object, the "view source" option (on IE) will still show you the way things were when the page first loaded, not how they currently are.
Also, what exactly is Ajax? If it just means updating info on the client (using Javascript and XML) by making calls to the server without reloading the entire client page, then we've been using Ajax for eight years.
updating info on the client (using Javascript and XML) by making calls to the server without reloading the entire client page
That's what I meant by ajax, but I think the word is often (mis)used in a way that does not mean what they think it means.
How is it misused?
OK, anybody have some advice about Wikipedia? I've been given the responsibility for getting an article about the place I work (non-profit/trade association) on Wikipedia. There's an article about the issue we promote, and it links to us, but no article about us specifically.
As I read it, Wikipedia doesn't allow users to create articles about their companies. I can't find any way to request an article. And I'm not sure we meet their "notability" requirement - googline the association gives me pages and pages of, well, us - our regional chapters and articles about our upcoming leadership transition.
Any advice?
The standard way to request an article, as far as I can tell, is to say to one's acquaintances, "hey, can someone go stick an article on Wikipedia?" There's no formal request process within Wikipedia (and shouldn't be, or the volume of wank in the universe would expand exponentially).
Notability is harder; if that's all that's out there, you really may not be notable by wikipedia's standards, whatever your bosses want to think. For that reason, your friendly volunteer should ideally be someone with some wikipedia experience who's willing to stick around and argue for the page in talk and not just stick something and disappear.