Hi Mario, Thanks for the response. But I remember there was a command you ran of some sort that actually extracted the TT files for you for a given YAML FormFu configuration. That way I can see exactly what the HTML for the form will look like. So instead of saying [% form %] in my TT I can just use the proper TT and embed javascript and CSS and possibly modify the presentation of the form itself. Maybe I didn't ask the question properly... my mistake. I am not that good with my Perl so I am not sure if I can write the connector classes without assistance. A friend of mine who is good with the client side of things will be working on the jQuery connection to the server ... so maybe if you explained a bit better what is needed on FormFu to talk to jQuery then I can pass it on to him to look at it for you.
Cheers, Manu On Mon, Apr 13, 2009 at 7:01 PM, Mario Minati <mario.min...@googlemail.com>wrote: > Hi Manu, > > you can do > my $string = "$form"; > to stringify the form. > > And yes, you are right, submitting the expected parameters does work. > > Maybe you are willing to write jQuery connector classes, as Moritz is > currently doing for ExtJS. > > > Greets, > > Mario Minati > > > Am Montag 13 April 2009 13:07:11 schrieb Manu Kaul: > > Hi,I was wondering if there was a way to extract the actual TT or HTML > code > > for the form that FormFu generates internally? I ask because I am trying > to > > use an AJAX/jQuery combination at the client side to interact with the > > server code. My understanding is that if the AJAX function were to submit > > the exact same form with the element IDs etc matching my FormFu > > configuration YAML then FormFu will validate the form details on the > server > > end. Is this correct? > > > > Cheers, > > Manu > > > > _______________________________________________ > HTML-FormFu mailing list > HTML-FormFu@lists.scsys.co.uk > http://lists.scsys.co.uk/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/html-formfu > -- The greater danger for most of us lies not in setting our aim too high and falling short; but in setting our aim too low, and achieving our mark. - Michelangelo
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