Yet another type of input is HIDDEN input.
<INPUT TYPE=HIDDEN NAME="FORMNAME" VALUE="Friend Form 1">
Let's suppose you were a company trying to generate leads for a new product. You have a standard form for gathering information... name, company, phone, products interested in, etc. The only problem is there are 6 slightly different versions of the form in 6 slightly different places. You need to know what's coming from where. What to do?
You could add a HIDDEN input to your forms like so...
<INPUT TYPE=HIDDEN NAME="FORMNAME" VALUE="Version 1">
...for the first version
<INPUT TYPE=HIDDEN NAME="FORMNAME" VALUE="Version 2">
...for the second version
<INPUT TYPE=HIDDEN NAME="FORMNAME" VALUE="Version 3">
...for the third version
And so on and so forth yada yada yada.
By the way, it doesn't matter what the name/value pair in the hidden input is (or any input for that matter). I have just been using "FORMNAME" because it saved me some typing. This would be a perfectly legitimate HIDDEN input...
<INPUT TYPE=HIDDEN NAME="E" VALUE="Mc^2"> ...You would get back E=Mc^2
HIDDEN inputs are also useful for cgi scripts. For example, many Internet Service Providers have a script you can have your forms sent to. It then spits the form back to you all nice and neat and ready for human consumption. The hidden input tells the cgi script who you are, where to send the parsed data, etc.
Last on the list are the SUBMIT and RESET buttons.
They really are very simple...
<INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT>
SUBMIT of course, sends the data...
...and RESET, clears the form.
<INPUT TYPE=RESET>
We can easily change what the buttons say.
<INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT VALUE="Send it away Ray!"><BR>
<INPUT TYPE=RESET VALUE="Clear the form Norm!"><P>
If necessary, the SUBMIT button can also have a NAME. You would need this if, for whatever reason, you had more than one SUBMIT button.
One more little tidbit and we're going to wrap this up. When you put a mailto form on your page and someone sends you information, you'll notice that it is sent with a default Subject. If you're visitor was using Netscape you'd get the default Subject "Form posted from Mozilla". Other browsers might send "Form Response", etc.
You can change this by editing what's in the <FORM> tag as follows...
<FORM METHOD=POST ACTION="mailto:michael@corleone.com?subject=Our friends in Las Vegas" ENCTYPE="application/x-www-form-urlencoded">
Pretty cool huh?
Introduction | Lesson 1 | Lesson 2 | Lesson 3 | Lesson 4 | Lesson 5 | Index |
PROFESSIONAL WEB DESIGN |