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MC379025: Microsoft Lists: Calendar view item drag and drop

The new feature, Microsoft Lists: Calendar view item drag, and drop will help reorganize Lists items in a calendar view. Users will be able to reschedule items by dragging and dropping them from one day to another in a Calendar view, or by pulling an item from the ‘Unscheduled’ pane that appears on the right, within Calendar view. This message is associated with Microsoft 365 Roadmap ID: 93285.

List items can be rescheduled by dragging and dropping them from one day to another while within a Calendar view, or by pulling an item from the ‘Unscheduled’ pane that appears on the right within Calendar view.

MC379025: Microsoft Lists: Calendar view item drag and drop

When this will happen

We will begin rolling this out by mid-May and expect to complete by late May.

How this will affect your organization

Users will now be able to:

  • Reschedule items by dragging them from one date to another in the calendar canvas
  • Un-schedule items (remove the saved dates) by dragging from calendar canvas and dropping them in the ‘unscheduled’ pane
  • Schedule items by dragging them from the ‘unscheduled’ pane and dropping them on any date in calendar canvas

New calendar canvas

What you need to do to prepare

No action is required to enable this feature. You may consider notifying users about this new capability and update your training and documentation as appropriate.

Message ID: MC379025
Published: 12 May 2022
Updated: 12 May 2022

Alex Lim is a certified IT Technical Support Architect with over 15 years of experience in designing, implementing, and troubleshooting complex IT systems and networks. He has worked for leading IT companies, such as Microsoft, IBM, and Cisco, providing technical support and solutions to clients across various industries and sectors. Alex has a bachelor’s degree in computer science from the National University of Singapore and a master’s degree in information security from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is also the author of several best-selling books on IT technical support, such as The IT Technical Support Handbook and Troubleshooting IT Systems and Networks. Alex lives in Bandar, Johore, Malaysia with his wife and two chilrdren. You can reach him at [email protected] or follow him on Website | Twitter | Facebook

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