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COS 125 DAY 17. Agenda  Assignment 7 not finished grading  Assignment 8 posted Due April 9  Capstone progress reports due  Quiz 2 Corrected 2 A’s,

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Presentation on theme: "COS 125 DAY 17. Agenda  Assignment 7 not finished grading  Assignment 8 posted Due April 9  Capstone progress reports due  Quiz 2 Corrected 2 A’s,"— Presentation transcript:

1 COS 125 DAY 17

2 Agenda  Assignment 7 not finished grading  Assignment 8 posted Due April 9  Capstone progress reports due  Quiz 2 Corrected 2 A’s, 3 B’s, 2 C’s, 2 D’s, and 1 F  New course time line  Discussion on Forms

3 New time line  April 2  Forms part1  Progress report 6  Forms part 2 9  Assignment 8 due  Multimedia 13  Scripts Part 1 16  Assignment 9 due  Scripts part 2 20  PodCasting  Progress report 23  Assignment 10 due  Quiz 3 27  Capstones & Presentations Due

4 Assignment 8

5 Learning Objectives  What are forms??  Understand how to create an xHTML form  Understand that most forms require a CGI script  Understand how to submit a form by e-mail without a CGI script  Be aware of form hosting services as a alternative way to process forms  Use form fieldset elements  Use form label elements  Use tabindex and accesskey attributes to improves a form’s accessibility  Understand how to disable form elements  Understand how to display form contents in a way that cannot be changed  Examples: http://www.cookwood.com/html6ed/examples/#c17 http://www.cookwood.com/html6ed/examples/#c17

6 What is a form??  A form is a way to actively collect or display information to or from a web site viewer  What can you do with forms? Get feedback Have a guestbook Take a survey See who’s visiting you Sell stuff And much more!

7 Form example

8 Form Example

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10 What is a form?  Two basic parts Structure or shell  Fields  Labels  Buttons  Graphic User Interface components  GUI pronounced “gooey” Scripts to process information collected  CGI  JavaScript  ASP  PHP

11 About CGI Scripts  A script is a program written in a scripting language Perl VBscript JavaScript PHP  Script runs on Web Server through a Interface Requires Web Server administrator Common Gateway Interface ASP engine JavaScript interpreter

12 What do Scripts do  Processes the elements in forms Collect data  Name  Values pairs  City=Fort%20Kent Display data  Name values Perform actions  Buttons  Scripts Do something with data collected Format data for display Add functionality to action elements

13 Creating A Form  A form has 3 important parts The form The script that process the form The form elements  Text boxes  Buttons  Menus  Basic Example Stuff

14 example  http://www.cookwood. com/html6ed/example s/forms/fullform.html http://www.cookwood. com/html6ed/example s/forms/fullform.html  More examples http://www.cookwood.c om/html6ed/examples/f orms/ http://www.cookwood.c om/html6ed/examples/f orms/

15 Sending From Data via E-mail  If you don’t want to use scripts you can have form data sent to you via e-mail mailto:me@there.com … form elements… http://perleybrook.umfk.maine.edu/classes/cos125 /HTML6ed_examples/forms/fullform_email.html

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17 Form example DEFAULT ACTION http://www.cookwood.com/cgi-bin/display_results.pl

18 Testing Forms (without a Script)  Send e-mail to yourseslf  Use a “display” script Action="http://www.cookwood.com/cgi- bin/display_results.pl" Action=“http://www.cookwood.com/html6ed/ex amples/forms/showform.php”

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20 Using a Form Hosting Service  An option to creating scripts is using a form hosting service  Steps Find a hosting service Connect to hosting service Read the site info Follow their instructions

21 http://www.response-o-matic.com/

22 Organizing The Form elements  You can some group elements in your form  After but before the first element you wish to group Name of Grouping  After the elements you wished to group

23 Fieldsets, legends CSS and IE7  http://www.cookwood.com/html6ed/exam ples/forms/fieldsetlegend.html http://www.cookwood.com/html6ed/exam ples/forms/fieldsetlegend.html fieldset.css Doesn’t work in IE  http://www.cookwood.com/html6ed/exam ples/forms/plegend.html http://www.cookwood.com/html6ed/exam ples/forms/plegend.html plegend.txt Does Works in IE

24 Fieldsets

25 In Opera

26 Creating text boxes  Text boxes contain one line of free-form text  Provide prompt to the users “Type your comments in the area provided.”  Value is default text that will appear in text box Size is the display area in number of characters Maxlength is maximum number of characters the text box will accept  Usually size < maxlenght

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28 Creating Password box  The difference between a text box and a password box is that the user will not see what they are typing. The characters are replaced with **  Give the user a prompt Enter password: While the “password” cannot be seen in the form it can be seen in the network stream

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30 Creating Labels for Form elements  Some label name Form element must have an ID If you do not use “for” then label is associated with “nearest” form element Use CSS to format labels

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32 Creating Radio Buttons  Radio Buttons allow you to select only one possible response from a list  The following creates a list of 3 choices with the third choice already selected.  Name must be the same for all radio buttons in the same group Choice A Choice B Choice C

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34 Creating Checkboxes  Checkboxes allow you to select as many responses as you like from a list  The following creates a list of 3 choices with the third choice already selected.  Name must be the same for all checkboxes in the same group Choice A Choice B Choice C

35 Creating Drop Down Menus

36  Prompt the user “Select one of the list:”  The following creates a drop down of N lines with 3 choices. Menu 3 is preselected. Menu 1 Menu 2 Menu 3

37 To Create Grouped menus  Create a menu as described on previous slide  Before the 1 st option tag in the 1 st group … After the last option you wish to group

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39 Creating a Larger Text Area  Gives user more room to write than text box  Prompt the user “Enter comments here:”  Default Text Can accepted up to 32,700 characters Scroll bars appear when user types in more text than visible area

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41 Allowing a user to Upload Files  Requires a special CGI script What files are you sending?

42 Allowing a user to Upload Files http://perleybrook.umfk.maine.edu/samples/forms/upload.html

43 Hidden Fields  The data is embedded in form and users doesn’t see and can’t modify   Must give a value  Data will be passed to script

44 Creating the Submit Button  When depressed will send all name value pairs to script  The text given for value will appear on the button  You can use many submit buttons if you name them  You can add an image to a submit (or any other) button  You can use CSS to style buttons

45 Resetting the Form  Resetting will cause all entered data on the form to be reset   You can add an image to a reset (or any other) button

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47 Using an Image to Submit Data  Create a GIF or JPEG image   Position of cursor when mouse is clicked will be relayed to script as Coord.x Coord.y

48 Using an Image to Submit Data

49 Other form attributes  Labels Label text Will place “Label text” before the form element with id=“aName” Can be formatted with CSS  Setting tab orders tabindex=“N” in element opening tag  Adding keyboard shortcuts acesskey = “B” in element opening tag  Disabling an element Disabled=“disabled”  Prevent a element from being modified Readonly=“readonly”

50 Capstone Update  Place your capstone project files in the capstone directory on the ftp server  Call the start page of your website “main.htm” and place in the capstone directory  Place your PowerPoint Presentation in this same directory  You will be able get to capstone through the menu

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52 Assignment # 8  Create a Guest Book  Students Create the input form Collect the following info  Name  E-mail  Age  Status  Favorite URL  Comments  Instructor wrote the ASP Scripts that create the guest book  The script will give you errors if your form isn’t correct

53 Assignment #8 If you get this after submitting your form, than your form is either incorrect Or the user did not use the form correctly

54 Assignment #8 If you get this after submitting your form, than your form is working correctly

55 Assignment #8


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