Book Image

Drupal 7 Webform Cookbook

By : Vernon Denny
Book Image

Drupal 7 Webform Cookbook

By: Vernon Denny

Overview of this book

<p>The Drupal Content Management System puts everyone in charge of their own internet destiny. Webform takes this power a step further by ensuring that you are never more than just a few mouse-clicks away from fully functional information-gathering forms. From simple contact forms to advanced web applications, Webform provides a solid tool set for both the novice and the expert.<br /><br /><em>Drupal 7 Webform Cookbook</em> gives you everything you need to achieve in minutes what previously cost hours in development and testing. Practical demonstrations of every facet give both the technical and the not-so-technical users an in-depth understanding of how things work.<br /><br />Install. Use. Customize. Extend. A mammoth learning curve devoured in small bytes: all digestible, with no choking.<br /><br />From designing coherent forms, to sending pretty HTML emails and managing data, explore the rich scope of possibilities that Webform enables. Also, easily extend and tune Webform with custom components and functionality.<br /><br />With <em>Drupal 7 Webform Cookbook</em> you are placed firmly in the driving seat.</p>
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Drupal 7 Webform Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Viewing submissions


The CRUD functions in Webform are closely related. Suitably authorized administrators will ordinarily find the corresponding Webform modes (Read/Retrieve = View, Update = Edit, Delete) grouped together, either as links or as tabs towards the top of the page.

How to do it...

Selecting any one of our test submissions at random, let us click on the View link in the OPERATIONS column.

How it works...

Webform makes use of the submission ID of the selected submission to retrieve all the related data from the database. Once all the data is to hand, Webform renders a facsimile of the form we designed. Typically the field names are rendered in bold text with the corresponding submitted data underneath in the normal theme font weight.

When working with submitted data in either View or Edit mode, the form layout is preceded by the submission metadata in the box entitled Submission information.

Following in the very sound design and engineering tradition of POLA (the Policy/Principle...