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Re: HTML::FillInForm

by bradcathey (Prior)
on May 18, 2005 at 13:19 UTC ( [id://458191]=note: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??


in reply to HTML::FillInForm

Practical application of HTML::FillInForm, used in conjunction with my favorite templating module, HTML::Template, is not well documented anywhere that I could find. Here's my take.

My biggest use of HTML::FillInForm will be for re-populating, selecting, or checking all the input types in my forms when returning the form for the user to correct a validation error, or when calling up a DB record to be edited. The associate function in H::T only "remembers" text-type input, so to avoid lots of convoluted javascript and Perl, I found the ideal tool in HTML::FillInForm. I did consider using CGI's very own popup_menu feature, but I am trying to keep my HTML completely separate from my Perl.

Anyway, here are some methods I've discovered in experimenting with the two modules:

PERL: my $q = new CGI; my $fvalues = $q -> Vars; #get all the value pairs from the submitted + form my $name = "Mr.". $q->param('name'); #alter one of them $fvalues->{name} = $name; my $template = HTML::Template->new( filename => "../form.tmpl"); my $html = $template->output; my $form = new HTML::FillInForm; my $page = $form->fill(scalarref => \$html, fdat => $fvalues); print "Content-type: text/html\n\n"; print $page; HTML: <form action="./fill.pl" method="post"> <input type="text" name="name" size="30" value="<tmpl_var name>" /> +<br /> <input type="text" name="address" size="30" /><br /> <select name="choices"> <option value="">Select...</option> <option value="1">Ciara</option> <option value="2">Lauren</option> <option value="3">Brian</option> </select><br /> <input type="submit"> </form>

Note: a value passed in the hash ref to fdat trumps assigning a value to a <tmpl_var> of the same name . So, this will not work:

my $fvalues = $q -> Vars; my $name = "Mr.". $q->param('name'); #alter one of them my $template = HTML::Template->new( filename => "../form.tmpl"); $template->param( name = $name ); my $html = $template->output;

However, this will:

my $fvalues = { address => '123 Main Street', choice => '2' }; #BTW, if the form tag is select with multiple attribute, use a referen +ce to an array of the values: #my @choices = (1, 3); #$fifvalues->{'choices'} = \@choices; my $name = "Mr.". $q->param('name'); #alter one of them my $template = HTML::Template->new( filename => "../form.tmpl"); $template->param( name = $name ); my $html = $template->output;

The above example can be used to populate a new form, e.g., when pulling up a DB record for editing.


—Brad
"The important work of moving the world forward does not wait to be done by perfect men." George Eliot

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