Dealing with XForms» XForms defines a variation on traditional webforms which allows them to be used on a wider variety of platforms and browsers or even non-traditional media such as PDF documents. The first key difference in XForms is how the form is sent to the client. » XForms for HTML Authors contains a detailed description of how to create XForms, for the purpose of this tutorial we'll only be looking at a simple example. Example #1 A simple XForms search form <h:html xmlns:h="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2002/xforms"> <h:head> <h:title>Search</h:title> <model> <submission action="http://example.com/search" method="post" id="s"/> </model> </h:head> <h:body> <h:p> <input ref="q"><label>Find</label></input> <submit submission="s"><label>Go</label></submit> </h:p> </h:body> </h:html>
The above form displays a text input box (named Here's where it starts to look different from your web application's point of view. In a normal HTML form, the data would be sent as application/x-www-form-urlencoded, in the XForms world however, this information is sent as XML formatted data. If you're choosing to work with XForms then you probably want that data as XML, in that case, look in $HTTP_RAW_POST_DATA where you'll find the XML document generated by the browser which you can pass into your favorite XSLT engine or document parser.
If you're not interested in formatting and just want your data to be loaded
into the traditional $_POST variable, you can instruct
the client browser to send it as application/x-www-form-urlencoded
by changing the Example #2 Using an XForm to populate $_POST <h:html xmlns:h="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2002/xforms"> <h:head> <h:title>Search</h:title> <model> <submission action="http://example.com/search" method="urlencoded-post" id="s"/> </model> </h:head> <h:body> <h:p> <input ref="q"><label>Find</label></input> <submit submission="s"><label>Go</label></submit> </h:p> </h:body> </h:html>
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