|
I don't quite follow. Do you have a for instance?
In cases I could see how you'd want to have similar
programming for fields (for example error checking a
"quantity" type field on 10 different forms would most
likely be the same).
But, with writing "good" javascript and having a set of
base functions, you really don't need to worry if you name
the fields the same on each form.
Ie:
if (!isValidNumber(qty))
and
if (!isValidNumber(quantity))
Are both very simple because you have the isValidNumber
function available to all HTML forms.
You can even take this further writing an isValidQuanity()
function that does:
function isValidQuantity(number) {
return isValidNumber(number) && isGreaterThanZero(number)
}
I'd much rather do this than worry about parsing XML data
streams from forms, and the added complexity that XML adds
to any web application (which in this type of case I could
say isn't really necessary). I'm sure there are instances
where it would be nice, but few and far between.
I may have missed what you were trying to say, but I'm all
ears. :)
Brad
www.bvstools.com
On Thu, 2 Oct 2003 11:16:33 -0700
"Eric Kempter" <EKempter@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> There is a good article on this at xml.com
> http://www.xml.com/lpt/a/2001/09/05/xforms.html
> Per the article, upon submit, the instance data is
> serialized as XML and sent to the server.
>
> What I really like about xforms is that it handles it's
> own error checking. While you can use javascript to do
> error checking in HTML forms, it is very difficult to
> create a javascript error checking script that can work
> with all HTML forms. It is practically impossible to
> consistently retrieve LABEL form field names because of
> the format differences between HTML pages/forms.
>
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