Rendering Forms as HTML rendering-forms-as-html
The Forms service renders forms as HTML in response to an HTTP request from a web browser. A benefit of rendering a form as HTML is that the computer on which the client web browser is located does not require Adobe Reader, Acrobat, or Flash Player (for form Guides (deprecated)).
To render a form as HTML, the form design must be saved as an XDP file. A form design that is saved as a PDF file cannot be rendered as HTML. When developing a form design in Designer that will be rendered as HTML, consider the following criteria:
- Do not use an object’s border properties to draw lines, boxes, or grids on your form. Some browsers may not line up borders exactly as they appear in a preview. Objects may appear layered or may push other objects off their expected position.
- You can use lines, rectangles, and circles to define the background.
- Draw text slightly larger than what seems to be required to accommodate the text. Some web browsers do not display the text legibly.
FormServiceClient
object’s (Deprecated) renderHTMLForm
and renderHTMLForm2
methods, the TIFF images are not visible in the rendered HTML form that is displayed in Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox browsers. These browsers do not provide native support for TIFF images.HTML pages html-pages
When a form design is rendered as an HTML form, each second-level subform is rendered as an HTML page (panel). You can view a subform’s hierarchy in Designer. Child subforms that belong to the root subform (the default name of a root subform is form1) are the panel subforms. The following example shows a form design’s subforms.
form1
Master Pages
PanelSubform1
NestedDynamicSubform
TextEdit1
PanelSubform2
TextEdit1
PanelSubform3
TextEdit1
PanelSubform4
TextEdit1
When form designs are rendered as HTML forms, the panels are not constrained to any particular page size. If you have dynamic subforms, they should be nested within the panel subform. Dynamic subforms are able to expand to an infinite number of HTML pages.
When a form is rendered as an HTML form, page sizes (required for paginating forms rendered as PDF) have no meaning. Because a form with a flowable layout can expand to an infinite number of HTML pages, it is important to avoid footers on the master page. A footer beneath the content area on a master page can overwrite HTML content that flows past a page boundary.
You must explicitly move from panel to panel using the xfa.host.pageUp
and xfa.host.pageDown
methods. You change pages by sending a form to the Forms service and having the Forms service render the form back to the client device, typically a web browser.
.fsc-ds-ssb: This style sheet is applicable in case of a blank sign field.
.fsc-ds-ssv: This style sheet is applicable in case of a Valid sign field.
.fsc-ds-ssc: This style sheet is applicable in case of a Valid sign field but data has changed.
.fsc-ds-ssi: This style sheet is applicable in case of a invalid sign field.
.fsc-ds-popup-bg: This style sheet property is not being used.
.fsc-ds-popup-btn: This style sheet property is not being used.
Running scripts running-scripts
A form author specifies whether a script executes on the server or the client. The Forms service creates a distributed, event processing environment for execution of form intelligence that can be distributed between the client and the server by using the runAt
attribute. For information about this attribute or creating scripts within form designs, see Forms Designer
The Forms service can execute scripts while the form is being rendered. As a result, you can prepopulate a form with data by connecting to a database or to web services that may not be available on the client. You can also set a button’s Click
event to run on the server so that the client will round trip data to the server. This allows the client to run scripts that may require server resources, such as an enterprise database, while a user is interacting with a form. For HTML forms, formcalc scripts can be executed on server only. As a result, you must mark these scripts to run at server
or both
.
You can design forms that move between pages (panels) by calling xfa.host.pageUp
and xfa.host.pageDown
methods. This script is placed in a button’s Click
event and the runAt
attribute is set to Both
. The reason you choose Both
is so that Adobe Reader or Acrobat (for forms that are rendered as PDF) can change pages without going to the server and HTML forms can change pages by round tripping data to the server. That is, a form is sent to the Forms service, and a form is rendered back as HTML with the new page displayed.
It is recommended that you do not give script variables and form fields the same names such as item. Some web browsers, such as Internet Explorer, may not initialize a variable with the same name as a form field that results in a script error occurring. It is good practice to give form fields and script variables different names.
When rendering HTML forms that contain both page navigation functionality and form scripts (for example, assume that a script retrieves field data from a database each time the form is rendered), ensure that the form script is located in the form:calculate event instead in of the form:readyevent.
Form scripts that are located in the form:ready event are executed only once during the initial rendering of the form and are not executed for subsequent page retrievals. In contrast, the form:calculate event is executed for each page navigation where the form is rendered.
You can invoke custom scripts before submitting a form. This feature works on all available browsers. However, it can be used only when users render the HTML form that has its Output Type
property set to Form Body
. It will not work when the Output Type
is Full HTML
. Refer to Configuring forms in administration help for steps to configure this feature.
You must first define a callback function that is called before submitting the form, where the name of the function is _user_onsubmit
. It is assumed that the function will not throw any exception, or if it does, the exception will be ignored. It is recommended to place the JavaScript function in the head section of the html; however, you can declare it anywhere before the end of the script tags that include xfasubset.js
.
When formserver renders an XDP that contains a drop-down list, in addition to creating the drop-down list, it also creates two hidden text fields. These text fields store the data of the drop-down list (one stores the display name of the options and other stores the value for the options). Therefore, every time a user submits the form, the entire data of the drop down list is submitted. Assuming that you don’t want to submit that much data everytime, you can write a custom script to disable that. For example: The name of the drop down list is drpOrderedByStateProv
and it is wrapped under subform header. The name of the HTML input element will be header[0].drpOrderedByStateProv[0]
. The name of the hidden fields that store and submit the data of the dropdown have the following names: header[0].drpOrderedByStateProv_DISPLAYITEMS_[0] header[0].drpOrderedByStateProv_VALUEITEMS_[0]
You can disable these input elements in the following way if you don’t want to post the data. var __CUSTOM_SCRIPTS_VERSION = 1; //enabling the feature function _user_onsubmit() { var elems = document.getElementsByName("header[0].drpOrderedByStateProv_DISPLAYITEMS_[0]"); elems[0].disabled = true; elems = document.getElementsByName("header[0].drpOrderedByStateProv_VALUEITEMS_[0]"); elems[0].disabled = true; }
header[0].drpOrderedByStateProv_DISPLAYITEMS_[0] header[0].drpOrderedByStateProv_VALUEITEMS_[0]
var __CUSTOM_SCRIPTS_VERSION = 1; //enabling the feature
function _user_onsubmit() {
var elems = document.getElementsByName("header[0].drpOrderedByStateProv_DISPLAYITEMS_[0]");
elems[0].disabled = true;
elems = document.getElementsByName("header[0].drpOrderedByStateProv_VALUEITEMS_[0]");
elems[0].disabled = true;
}
XFA subsets xfa-subsets
When creating form designs to render as HTML, you must restrict your scripting to the XFA subset for scripts in javascript language.
Scripts that run on the client or run on both the client and the server must be written within the XFA subset. Scripts that run on the server can use the full XFA scripting model and also use FormCalc. For information about using JavaScript, see Forms Designer.
When running scripts on the client, only the current panel being displayed can use script; for example, you cannot script against fields that are located in panel A when panel B is displayed. When running scripts on the server, all panels can be accessed.
You must also be careful when using Scripting Object Model (SOM) expressions within scripts that run on the client. Only a simplified subset of SOM expressions are supported by scripts that run on the client.
Event timing event-timing
The XFA subset defines the XFA events that are mapped to HTML events. There is a slight difference in behavior on the timing of calculate and validate events. In a web browser, a full calculate event is executed when you exit a field. Calculate events are not automatically executed when you make a change to a field value. You can force a calculate event by calling the xfa.form.execCalculate
method.
In a web browser, validate events are only executed when exiting a field or submitting a form. You can force a validate event by using the xfa.form.execValidate
method.
Forms displayed in a web browser (as opposed to Adobe Reader or Acrobat) conform to the XFA null test (errors or warnings) for mandatory fields.
- If the null test produces an error and you exit a field without specifying a value, a message box is displayed and you are repositioned to the field after clicking OK.
- If a null test produces a warning and you exit a field without specifying a value, you are prompted to click either OK or Cancel, giving you the option of proceeding without specifying a value or returning to the field to enter a value.
For more information about a null test, see Forms Designer.
Form buttons form-buttons
Clicking a submit button sends form data to the Forms service and represents the end of form processing. The preSubmit
event can be set to run on the client or server. The preSubmit
event runs prior to the form submission if it is configured to run on the client. Otherwise, the preSubmit
event runs on the server during the form submission. For more information about the preSubmit
event, see Forms Designer.
If a button has no client-side script associated with it, data is submitted to the server, calculations are performed on the server, and the HTML form is regenerated. If a button contains a client-side script, data is not sent to the server and the client-side script is executed in the web browser.
HTML 4.0 web browser html-4-0-web-browser
A web browser that only supports HTML 4.0 cannot support the XFA subset client-side scripting model. When creating a form design to work in both HTML 4.0 and MSDHTML or CSS2HTML, a script that is marked to run at the client will actually run on the server. For example, assume a user clicks a button that is located on a form displayed in an HTML 4.0 web browser. In this situation, the form data is sent to the server where the client-side script is executed.
It is recommended that you place your form logic in calculate events, which run at the server in HTML 4.0 and on the client for MSDHTML or CSS2HTML.
Maintaining presentation changes maintaining-presentation-changes
As you move between HTML pages (panels), only the state of the data is maintained. Settings such as background color or mandatory field settings are not maintained (if different than the initial settings). To maintain the presentation state, you must create fields (usually hidden) that represent the presentation state of fields. If you add a script to a field’s Calculate
event that changes the presentation based on hidden field values, you are able to preserve the presentation state as you move back and forth between HTML pages (panels).
The following script maintains the fillColor
of a field based on the value of hiddenField
. Assume this script is located in a field’s Calculate
event.
If (hiddenField.rawValue == 1)
this.fillColor = "255,0,0"
else
this.fillColor = "0,255,0"
Digitally signing HTML forms digitally-signing-html-forms
You cannot sign an HTML form that contains a digital signature field if the form is rendered as one of the following HTML transformations:
- AHTML
- HTML4
- StaticHTML
- NoScriptXHTML
For information about digitally signing a document, see Digitally Signing and Certifying Documents
Rendering an accessibility guidelines-compliant XHTML form rendering-an-accessibility-guidelines-compliant-xhtml-form
You can render a full HTML form that is compliant with accessibility guidelines. That is, the form is rendered within full HTML tags as opposed to the HTML form being rendered within body tags (not a complete HTML page).
Validating form data validating-form-data
It is recommended that you limit your use of validation rules for form fields when rendering the form as an HTML form. Some validation rules may not be supported for HTML forms. For example, when a validation pattern of MM-DD-YYYY is applied to a Date/Time
field that is located in a form design that is rendered as an HTML form, it does not work properly, even if the date is typed in properly. However, this validation pattern works properly for forms rendered as PDF.
Summary of steps summary-of-steps
To render an HTML form, perform the following steps:
- Include project files.
- Create a Forms Client API object.
- Set HTML run-time options.
- Render an HTML form.
- Write the form data stream to the client web browser.
Include project files
Include necessary files into your development project. If you are creating a client application using Java, include the necessary JAR files. If you are using web services, ensure that you include the proxy files.
Create a Forms Client API object
Before you can programmatically import data into a PDF formClient API, you must create a Form Data Integration service client. When creating a service client, you define connection settings that are required to invoke a service.
Set HTML run-time options
You set HTML run-time options when rendering an HTML form. For example, you can add a toolbar to an HTML form to enable users to select file attachments located on the client computer or to retrieve file attachments that are rendered with the HTML form. By default, an HTML toolbar is disabled. To add a toolbar to an HTML form, you must programmatically set run-time options. By default, an HTML toolbar consists of the following buttons:
Home
: Provides a link to the application’s web root.Upload
: Provides a user interface to select files to attach to the current form.Download
: Provides a user interface to display the attached files.
When a HTML toolbar appears on a HTML form, a user can select a maximum of ten files to submit along with form data. Once the files are submitted, the Forms service can retrieve the files.
When rendering a form as HTML, you can specify a user-agent value. A user-agent value provides browser and system information. This is an optional value, and you can pass an empty string value. The Rendering an HTML form using the Java API quick start shows how to obtain a user agent value and use it to render a form as HTML.
HTTP URLs to where form data is posted may be specified by setting the target URL using the Forms Service Client API or may be specified in the Submit button contained in the XDP form design. If the target URL is specified in the form design, then do not set a value using the Forms Service Client API.
Render an HTML form
To render an HTML form, you must specify a form design created in Designer and saved as an XDP file. You must also select an HTML transformation type. For example, you can specify the HTML transformation type that renders a dynamic HTML for Internet Explorer 5.0 or later.
Rendering an HTML form also requires values, such as URI values that are required to render other form types.
Write the form data stream to the client web browser
When the Forms service renders an HTML form, it returns a form data stream that you must write to the client web browser. When written to the client web browser, the HTML form is visible to the user.
See also
Render a form as HTML using the Java API
Render a form as HTML using the web service API
Including AEM Forms Java library files
Forms Service API Quick Starts
Rendering Interactive PDF Forms
Rendering HTML Forms with Custom Toolbars
Creating Web Applications that Renders Forms
Render a form as HTML using the Java API render-a-form-as-html-using-the-java-api
Render an HTML form by using the Forms API (Java):
-
Include project files
Include client JAR files, such as adobe-forms-client.jar, in your Java project’s class path.
-
Create a Forms Client API object
- Create a
ServiceClientFactory
object that contains connection properties. - Create an
FormsServiceClient
object by using its constructor and passing theServiceClientFactory
object.
- Create a
-
Set HTML run-time options
- Create an
HTMLRenderSpec
object by using its constructor. - To render an HTML form with a toolbar, invoke the
HTMLRenderSpec
object’ssetHTMLToolbar
method and pass anHTMLToolbar
enum value. For example, to display a vertical HTML toolbar, passHTMLToolbar.Vertical
. - To set the locale value for the HTML form, invoke the
HTMLRenderSpec
object’ssetLocale
method and pass a string value that specifies the locale value. (This is an optional setting.) - To render the HTML form within full HTML tags, invoke the
HTMLRenderSpec
object’ssetOutputType
method and passOutputType.FullHTMLTags
. (This is an optional setting.)
note note NOTE Forms are not successfully rendered in HTML when the StandAlone
option istrue
and theApplicationWebRoot
references a server other than the J2EE application server hosting AEM Forms (theApplicationWebRoot
value is specified using theURLSpec
object that is passed to theFormsServiceClient
object’s(Deprecated) renderHTMLForm
method). When theApplicationWebRoot
* is another server from the one hosting AEM Forms, the value of the web root URI in the administration console needs to be set as the Form’s web application URI value. This can be done by logging in to the administration console, clicking Services > Forms, and setting the Web Root URI as https://server-name:port/FormServer. Then, save your settings.* - Create an
-
Render an HTML form
Invoke the
FormsServiceClient
object’s(Deprecated) renderHTMLForm
method and pass the following values:- A string value that specifies the form design name, including the file name extension. If you reference a form design that is part of a Forms application, ensure that you specify the complete path, such as
Applications/FormsApplication/1.0/FormsFolder/Loan.xdp
. - A
TransformTo
enum value that specifies the HTML preference type. For example, to render an HTML form that is compatible with dynamic HTML for Internet Explorer 5.0 or later, specifyTransformTo.MSDHTML
. - A
com.adobe.idp.Document
object that contains data to merge with the form. If you do not want to merge data, pass an emptycom.adobe.idp.Document
object. - The
HTMLRenderSpec
object that stores HTML run-time options. - A string value that specifies the
HTTP_USER_AGENT
header value; for example,Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322)
. - A
URLSpec
object that stores URI values required to render an HTML form. - A
java.util.HashMap
object that stores file attachments. This is an optional parameter and you can specifynull
if you do not want to attach files to the form.
The
(Deprecated) renderHTMLForm
method returns aFormsResult
object that contains a form data stream that can be written to the client web browser. - A string value that specifies the form design name, including the file name extension. If you reference a form design that is part of a Forms application, ensure that you specify the complete path, such as
-
Write the form data stream to the client web browser
- Create a
com.adobe.idp.Document
object by invoking theFormsResult
object ‘sgetOutputContent
method. - Get the content type of the
com.adobe.idp.Document
object by invoking itsgetContentType
method. - Set the
javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse
object’s content type by invoking itssetContentType
method and passing the content type of thecom.adobe.idp.Document
object. - Create a
javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream
object used to write the form data stream to the client web browser by invoking thejavax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse
object’sgetOutputStream
method. - Create a
java.io.InputStream
object by invoking thecom.adobe.idp.Document
object’sgetInputStream
method. - Create a byte array and populate it with the form data stream by invoking the
InputStream
object’sread
method and passing the byte array as an argument. - Invoke the
javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream
object’swrite
method to send the form data stream to the client web browser. Pass the byte array to thewrite
method.
- Create a
See also
Quick Start (SOAP mode): Rendering an HTML form using the Java API
Including AEM Forms Java library files
Render a form as HTML using the web service API render-a-form-as-html-using-the-web-service-api
Render an HTML form by using the Forms API (web service):
-
Include project files
- Create Java proxy classes that consume the Forms service WSDL.
- Include the Java proxy classes into your class path.
-
Create a Forms Client API object
Create a
FormsService
object and set authentication values. -
Set HTML run-time options
- Create an
HTMLRenderSpec
object by using its constructor. - To render an HTML form with a toolbar, invoke the
HTMLRenderSpec
object’ssetHTMLToolbar
method and pass anHTMLToolbar
enum value. For example, to display a vertical HTML toolbar, passHTMLToolbar.Vertical
. - To set the locale value for the HTML form, invoke the
HTMLRenderSpec
object’ssetLocale
method and pass a string value that specifies the locale value. For more information, see AEM Forms API Reference. - To render the HTML form within full HTML tags, invoke the
HTMLRenderSpec
object’ssetOutputType
method and passOutputType.FullHTMLTags
.
note note NOTE Forms are not successfully rendered in HTML when the StandAlone
option istrue
and theApplicationWebRoot
references a server other than the J2EE application server hosting AEM Forms (theApplicationWebRoot
value is specified using theURLSpec
object that is passed to theFormsServiceClient
object’s(Deprecated) renderHTMLForm
method). When theApplicationWebRoot
* is another server from the one hosting AEM Forms, the value of the web root URI in the administration console needs to be set as the Form’s web application URI value. This can be done by logging in to the administration console, clicking Services > Forms, and setting the Web Root URI as https://server-name:port/FormServer. Then, save your settings. * - Create an
-
Render an HTML form
Invoke the
FormsService
object’s(Deprecated) renderHTMLForm
method and pass the following values:- A string value that specifies the form design name, including the file name extension. If you reference a form design that is part of a Forms application, ensure that you specify the complete path, such as
Applications/FormsApplication/1.0/FormsFolder/Loan.xdp
. - A
TransformTo
enum value that specifies the HTML preference type. For example, to render an HTML form that is compatible with dynamic HTML for Internet Explorer 5.0 or later, specifyTransformTo.MSDHTML
. - A
BLOB
object that contains data to merge with the form. If you do not want to merge data, passnull
. (See Prepopulating Forms with Flowable Layouts.) - The
HTMLRenderSpec
object that stores HTML run-time options. - A string value that specifies the
HTTP_USER_AGENT
header value; for example,Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; SV1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322)
. You can pass an empty string if you do not want to set this value. - A
URLSpec
object that stores URI values required to render an HTML form. (See Specify URI values.) - A
java.util.HashMap
object that stores file attachments. This is an optional parameter and you can specifynull
if you do not want to attach files to the form. (See Attach files to the form.) - An empty
com.adobe.idp.services.holders.BLOBHolder
object that is populated by the method. This parameter value stores the rendered form. - An empty
com.adobe.idp.services.holders.BLOBHolder
object that is populated by the method. This parameter will store the output XML data. - An empty
javax.xml.rpc.holders.LongHolder
object that is populated by the method. This argument will store the number of pages in the form. - An empty
javax.xml.rpc.holders.StringHolder
object that is populated by the method. This argument will store the locale value. - An empty
javax.xml.rpc.holders.StringHolder
object that is populated by the method. This argument will store the HTML rendering value that is used. - An empty
com.adobe.idp.services.holders.FormsResultHolder
object that will contain the results of this operation.
The
(Deprecated) renderHTMLForm
method populates thecom.adobe.idp.services.holders.FormsResultHolder
object that is passed as the last argument value with a form data stream that must be written to the client web browser. - A string value that specifies the form design name, including the file name extension. If you reference a form design that is part of a Forms application, ensure that you specify the complete path, such as
-
Write the form data stream to the client web browser
- Create a
FormResult
object by getting the value of thecom.adobe.idp.services.holders.FormsResultHolder
object’svalue
data member. - Create a
BLOB
object that contains form data by invoking theFormsResult
object’sgetOutputContent
method. - Get the content type of the
BLOB
object by invoking itsgetContentType
method. - Set the
javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse
object’s content type by invoking itssetContentType
method and passing the content type of theBLOB
object. - Create a
javax.servlet.ServletOutputStream
object used to write the form data stream to the client web browser by invoking thejavax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse
object’sgetOutputStream
method. - Create a byte array and populate it by invoking the
BLOB
object’sgetBinaryData
method. This task assigns the content of theFormsResult
object to the byte array. - Invoke the
javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse
object’swrite
method to send the form data stream to the client web browser. Pass the byte array to thewrite
method.
- Create a
See also
Invoking AEM Forms using Base64 encoding