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9-Apr-24
HTML Forms
Mrs. Goins Web Design Class
Parts of a Web Form
 A Form is an area that can contain Form
Control/Elements.
 Each piece of information for a form is stored in a Field.
 The value itself is called Field Value.
2
Parts of a Web Form
 Users enter or select a field using Form
Control/ Elements.
 Form/Control elements include: buttons, checkboxes, text
fields, radio buttons, drop-down menus, etc
 A form usually contains a Submit button to send the information
in the form elements to the server
3
Control Elements
 Input Boxes – for text and numerical entries
 Option Buttons, also called Radio Buttons – for
selecting a single option from a predefined list
 Selection Lists – for long lists of options, usually
appearing in a Drop-Down List Box
 Check Boxes – for specifying yes or no
 Text Areas – for extended entries that can include
several lines of text
4
5
HTML Forms
 The basic construction of a HTML form is this...
<form> - begin a form
<input> - ask for information in one of several different ways
<input> - there can be as many input areas as you wish
</form> - end a form HTML form
Forms and Server-Based Programs
 Forms are used to collect information.
 The information is then sent back to the server.
 Information is stored and analyzed using a program on
the server.
 By giving users access to programs that react to user
input, the Web became a more dynamic environment
where companies and users could interact.
6
Forms and Server-Based Programs
 Server-Based programs provide:
 Online databases containing customer information
 Online catalogs for ordering and purchasing merchandise
 Dynamic Web sites with content that is constantly modified
and updated
 Message boards for hosting online discussion forums
7
Forms and Server-Based Programs
 Because these programs run on Web servers, rather than locally,
users might not have permission to create or edit them. Instead,
users will receive information about how to interact with the
programs on the server.
 Several reason to restrict direct access:
 When you run a server-based program, you are interacting
directly with the server
 Security risks (computer hackers)
 Drain on system resources caused by large number of
programs running simultaneously
8
Forms and Server-Based Programs
 Server-Based Programs
 Common Gateway Interface (CGI) Scripts
 Most common
 ASP
 Cold Fusion
 C/C++
 PHP
 VBScript
 The Web server determines which language your Web
form will use.
9
10
Getting Started
 The first step in creating a form is to specify the name and location of the CGI
script that will be used to process the form data. To do this, type the following
code within your HTML file, and note that there are no spaces:
 <form METHOD="Post" ACTION=http://www.temple.edu/cgi-in/mail?your-
e-mail-address@temple.edu>
 For example, if your e-mail address is jsmith@temple.edu, you would enter:
 <form METHOD="Post" ACTION="http://www.temple.edu/cgi-
bin/mail?jsmith@temple.edu">
11
Text Input (type=“text”)
 A Text Field:
 used to create one line fields that viewers can type text. The default width
is 20 characters, and you can create fields of other sizes by the value in
the size option. You can limit the number of characters by the value of the
MAXLENGTH option. Text input fields will be empty when the page
loads, unless you provide an initial text string for its VALUE option
 <input type="text" name="textfield" size=“value” value="with an
initial value">
12
Text Input (type=“text”)
 Example 1: A text field named "text1" that is 30 characters wide.
 <input type="text" name="text1" size="30">
 Example 2: A text field named "text2" that is 30 characters wide but will
only accept 20 characters.
 <input type="text" name="text2" size="30" maxlength="20">
 Example 3: A text field named "text3" that is 40 characters wide with
default value.
 <input type="text" name="text3" size="40" value="We are not alone">
13
Password Input (type=“password”)
 are exactly the same as text input elements, except that when the viewer types
in, they see "bullet" characters rather then the letter they are typing. Password
text is scrambled during transmission and then unscramble when the form data
is received at the server end.
 Example 4: A password field named "pass1" that is 30 characters wide
 <input type="password" name="pass1" size="30">
 Example 5: A password field named "pass2" that is 30 characters wide
but will only accept 20 characters
 <input type="password" name="pass2" size="30" maxlength="20">
14
Text Input (type=“textarea”)
 Text fields that have more than one line and can scroll as the viewer enters
more text. The tag options define the size of the field by the number of rows
and character columns. By adding the option WRAP=VIRTUAL, the text
entered will automatically wrap at the right hand side of the field. You can also
include default text to appear in the field
 Example 6: A textarea field named "comments" that is 45 characters wide
and 6 lines high
 <textarea name="comments" rows="6" cols="45" wrap="virtual">
The first time I ever saw a web page, I thought.... (continue)
</textarea>
15
Adding Control Buttons
 A form must include at least one control button for
submitting the information once it is filled out. In
addition, forms often include a button for resetting all
the entries if a person wants to start over.
 When a person presses the submit button, he or she will
receive confirmation that the form results were sent to
your e-mail address. You will then see an e-mail
message in your Inbox with the subject FORM results.
16
Adding Control Buttons
 A submit button:
<input type="submit" name="Submit" value="Submit">
 A reset button:
<input type="reset" name="Submit2" value="Reset">
 submit: send data
 reset: restore all form elements to
their initial state
• Note that the type is input, not “button”
17
Radio buttons (type=“radio”)
 Are sets of controls that are linked so that only one radio button among each
set is selected at a time
 If you click one radio button, the others in the set are automatically de-
selected
 A set of radio buttons is defined by providing them the same name
 The value sent in the web form is the value of the radio button that was last
selected
 Adding the option CHECKED to one of the buttons in a set will make that
button highlighted when the page loads
 Radio buttons do not contain any text
18
Radio buttons (type=“radio”)
Radio buttons:<br>
<input type="radio" name="radiobutton" value="myValue1">
male<br>
<input type="radio" name="radiobutton" value="myValue2" checked>
female
19
Checkboxes (type=“checkbox”)
 Are similar to radio buttons, but are not affected by other buttons,
so you can have more than one in a group checked at a time
 Note that every checkbox has a unique name. If there is no check
in the box, clicking it will place an X or a check mark there
 If the box is checked, clicking it again will remove the mark. The
value sent in the web form is the value of the checkbox if it was
selected; otherwise the value will be empty
 Adding the option CHECKED to a checkbox will make that
checkbox highlighted when the page loads.
20
Checkboxes (type=“checkbox”)
 A checkbox:
<input type="checkbox" name="checkbox”
value="checkbox" checked>
 type: “checkbox”
 name: used to reference this form element from JavaScript
 value: value to be returned when element is checked
 Note that there is no text associated with the checkbox—
you have to supply text in the surrounding HTML
21
Drop-down menu or list
 A menu or list:
<select name="select">
<option value="red">red</option>
<option value="green">green</option>
<option value=“blue">blue</option>
</select>
 Additional arguments:
 size: the number of items visible in the list (default is "1")
 multiple: if set to "true", any number of items may be selected
(default is "false")
22
Practice Exercise
23
A complete example
<html>
<head>
<title>Get Identity</title>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;
charset=iso-8859-1">
</head>
<body>
<p><b>Who are you?</b></p>
<form method="post" action="">
<p>Name:
<input type="text" name="textfield">
</p>
<p>Gender:
<input type="radio" name="gender" value="m">Male
<input type="radio" name="gender" value="f">Female</p>
</form>
</body>
</html>

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Html,Css and Javascript Forms using different tags

  • 2. Parts of a Web Form  A Form is an area that can contain Form Control/Elements.  Each piece of information for a form is stored in a Field.  The value itself is called Field Value. 2
  • 3. Parts of a Web Form  Users enter or select a field using Form Control/ Elements.  Form/Control elements include: buttons, checkboxes, text fields, radio buttons, drop-down menus, etc  A form usually contains a Submit button to send the information in the form elements to the server 3
  • 4. Control Elements  Input Boxes – for text and numerical entries  Option Buttons, also called Radio Buttons – for selecting a single option from a predefined list  Selection Lists – for long lists of options, usually appearing in a Drop-Down List Box  Check Boxes – for specifying yes or no  Text Areas – for extended entries that can include several lines of text 4
  • 5. 5 HTML Forms  The basic construction of a HTML form is this... <form> - begin a form <input> - ask for information in one of several different ways <input> - there can be as many input areas as you wish </form> - end a form HTML form
  • 6. Forms and Server-Based Programs  Forms are used to collect information.  The information is then sent back to the server.  Information is stored and analyzed using a program on the server.  By giving users access to programs that react to user input, the Web became a more dynamic environment where companies and users could interact. 6
  • 7. Forms and Server-Based Programs  Server-Based programs provide:  Online databases containing customer information  Online catalogs for ordering and purchasing merchandise  Dynamic Web sites with content that is constantly modified and updated  Message boards for hosting online discussion forums 7
  • 8. Forms and Server-Based Programs  Because these programs run on Web servers, rather than locally, users might not have permission to create or edit them. Instead, users will receive information about how to interact with the programs on the server.  Several reason to restrict direct access:  When you run a server-based program, you are interacting directly with the server  Security risks (computer hackers)  Drain on system resources caused by large number of programs running simultaneously 8
  • 9. Forms and Server-Based Programs  Server-Based Programs  Common Gateway Interface (CGI) Scripts  Most common  ASP  Cold Fusion  C/C++  PHP  VBScript  The Web server determines which language your Web form will use. 9
  • 10. 10 Getting Started  The first step in creating a form is to specify the name and location of the CGI script that will be used to process the form data. To do this, type the following code within your HTML file, and note that there are no spaces:  <form METHOD="Post" ACTION=http://www.temple.edu/cgi-in/mail?your- [email protected]>  For example, if your e-mail address is [email protected], you would enter:  <form METHOD="Post" ACTION="http://www.temple.edu/cgi- bin/[email protected]">
  • 11. 11 Text Input (type=“text”)  A Text Field:  used to create one line fields that viewers can type text. The default width is 20 characters, and you can create fields of other sizes by the value in the size option. You can limit the number of characters by the value of the MAXLENGTH option. Text input fields will be empty when the page loads, unless you provide an initial text string for its VALUE option  <input type="text" name="textfield" size=“value” value="with an initial value">
  • 12. 12 Text Input (type=“text”)  Example 1: A text field named "text1" that is 30 characters wide.  <input type="text" name="text1" size="30">  Example 2: A text field named "text2" that is 30 characters wide but will only accept 20 characters.  <input type="text" name="text2" size="30" maxlength="20">  Example 3: A text field named "text3" that is 40 characters wide with default value.  <input type="text" name="text3" size="40" value="We are not alone">
  • 13. 13 Password Input (type=“password”)  are exactly the same as text input elements, except that when the viewer types in, they see "bullet" characters rather then the letter they are typing. Password text is scrambled during transmission and then unscramble when the form data is received at the server end.  Example 4: A password field named "pass1" that is 30 characters wide  <input type="password" name="pass1" size="30">  Example 5: A password field named "pass2" that is 30 characters wide but will only accept 20 characters  <input type="password" name="pass2" size="30" maxlength="20">
  • 14. 14 Text Input (type=“textarea”)  Text fields that have more than one line and can scroll as the viewer enters more text. The tag options define the size of the field by the number of rows and character columns. By adding the option WRAP=VIRTUAL, the text entered will automatically wrap at the right hand side of the field. You can also include default text to appear in the field  Example 6: A textarea field named "comments" that is 45 characters wide and 6 lines high  <textarea name="comments" rows="6" cols="45" wrap="virtual"> The first time I ever saw a web page, I thought.... (continue) </textarea>
  • 15. 15 Adding Control Buttons  A form must include at least one control button for submitting the information once it is filled out. In addition, forms often include a button for resetting all the entries if a person wants to start over.  When a person presses the submit button, he or she will receive confirmation that the form results were sent to your e-mail address. You will then see an e-mail message in your Inbox with the subject FORM results.
  • 16. 16 Adding Control Buttons  A submit button: <input type="submit" name="Submit" value="Submit">  A reset button: <input type="reset" name="Submit2" value="Reset">  submit: send data  reset: restore all form elements to their initial state • Note that the type is input, not “button”
  • 17. 17 Radio buttons (type=“radio”)  Are sets of controls that are linked so that only one radio button among each set is selected at a time  If you click one radio button, the others in the set are automatically de- selected  A set of radio buttons is defined by providing them the same name  The value sent in the web form is the value of the radio button that was last selected  Adding the option CHECKED to one of the buttons in a set will make that button highlighted when the page loads  Radio buttons do not contain any text
  • 18. 18 Radio buttons (type=“radio”) Radio buttons:<br> <input type="radio" name="radiobutton" value="myValue1"> male<br> <input type="radio" name="radiobutton" value="myValue2" checked> female
  • 19. 19 Checkboxes (type=“checkbox”)  Are similar to radio buttons, but are not affected by other buttons, so you can have more than one in a group checked at a time  Note that every checkbox has a unique name. If there is no check in the box, clicking it will place an X or a check mark there  If the box is checked, clicking it again will remove the mark. The value sent in the web form is the value of the checkbox if it was selected; otherwise the value will be empty  Adding the option CHECKED to a checkbox will make that checkbox highlighted when the page loads.
  • 20. 20 Checkboxes (type=“checkbox”)  A checkbox: <input type="checkbox" name="checkbox” value="checkbox" checked>  type: “checkbox”  name: used to reference this form element from JavaScript  value: value to be returned when element is checked  Note that there is no text associated with the checkbox— you have to supply text in the surrounding HTML
  • 21. 21 Drop-down menu or list  A menu or list: <select name="select"> <option value="red">red</option> <option value="green">green</option> <option value=“blue">blue</option> </select>  Additional arguments:  size: the number of items visible in the list (default is "1")  multiple: if set to "true", any number of items may be selected (default is "false")
  • 23. 23 A complete example <html> <head> <title>Get Identity</title> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> </head> <body> <p><b>Who are you?</b></p> <form method="post" action=""> <p>Name: <input type="text" name="textfield"> </p> <p>Gender: <input type="radio" name="gender" value="m">Male <input type="radio" name="gender" value="f">Female</p> </form> </body> </html>