The Community will be temporarily unavailable starting on Friday February 28. We’ll be back as soon as we can! To learn more, check out our Announcements blog post.
I feel like what I want to do is very simple, but honestly, I'm wasting a lot of time without succeeding. My level of incompetence is quickly reached.So, I have in my Table 1 a Date field and a field that I'll call field N. In my Table 2, there is al...
Time zones are difficult to handle within AirTable. Here is an example that gives me a headache. I have a table (let's call this table Calendar) in which there is, among other things, a Date Field associated with an event occurring at a Location. Str...
I am sure it is quite simple, but for some reason, I can't find the way to do it.Let us say I have Table A. In the Table A, I have, amongst many others, a Date field.I also have Table B, with two fields in it. One field is a (unique) Date. The other ...
Hi.I know how to display items from two bases in the same calender.But I realize I do not know how to easily display items from two tables from the same base.That should be easy, isn't it?
Hi to all.Happy to report that when I asked ChatGPT for an app that will display reactive table views that will adapt to the display size, it suggested AirTable.So I prepared a gallery view with info that I want to share with my co-workers ( i work i...
There is a concept used in Todoist that I like a lot: floating time zone. Too bad there is no similar concept used in AirTable.Still struggling with it in AirTable. Realized this week-end that some shared calender I sent to colleagues in not in the g...
I suppose I could simply ignore time zones in all tables, which I believe might work as long as I am dealing with local productions. I don't really like the idea of entering dates and times in AirTable's time zone (GMT) and constantly calculating the...