Fragment identifier in form action attribute - html

I have a form which I'd like to post to the same page. The form action contains a fragment identifier for the element on the page that contains it - what I want it to do is post the data, then reload the same page at the same point so the user doesn't need to scroll down.
example index.php:
<div>
some very long content that pushes my form down the page
</div>
<div id="myDiv">
<form action="index.php#myDiv" method="post">
<input name="abc" value="123"/>
<input type="submit" value="submit"/>
</form>
</div>
However I have a couple of problems - firstly I'm not sure if this is good practice and can't find much on what is considered good practice with fragment identifiers.
Second, some others have said that sometimes the form "jumps to the top" when they click submit. I haven't been able to reproduce this yet but it seems pretty obvious that instead of posting the data, the browser is going with the fragment identifier action instead.
Can anyone suggest a better way to do this?

Redirect the user after the form submission using header() function along with identifier.
<div>
some very long content that pushes my form down the page
</div>
/*Use header() to redirect the person on the #point*/
<?php
//form data goes here, if it passes everything then use
header('Location:index.php#myDiv');
exit;
?>
<div id="myDiv">
<form action="index.php" method="post">
<input name="abc" value="123"/>
<input type="submit" value="submit"/>
</form>
</div>

Related

Weird behaviour of form element in bootstrap (gets removed from the DOM for some reason) [duplicate]

Is it possible to nest html forms like this
<form name="mainForm">
<form name="subForm">
</form>
</form>
so that both forms work? My friend is having problems with this, a part of the subForm works, while another part of it does not.
In a word, no. You can have several forms in a page but they should not be nested.
From the html5 working draft:
4.10.3 The form element
Content model:
Flow content, but with no form element descendants.
The HTML5 <input> form attribute can be the solution.
From http://www.w3schools.com/tags/att_input_form.asp:
The form attribute is new in HTML5.
Specifies which <form> element an <input> element belongs to. The value of this attribute must be the id attribute of a <form> element in the same document.
Scenario:
input_Form1_n1
input_Form2_n1
input_Form1_n2
input_Form2_n2
Implementation:
<form id="Form1" action="Action1.php" method="post"></form>
<form id="Form2" action="Action2.php" method="post"></form>
<input type="text" name="input_Form1_n1" form="Form1" />
<input type="text" name="input_Form2_n1" form="Form2" />
<input type="text" name="input_Form1_n2" form="Form1" />
<input type="text" name="input_Form2_n2" form="Form2" />
<input type="submit" name="button1" value="buttonVal1" form="Form1" />
<input type="submit" name="button2" value="buttonVal2" form="Form2" />
Here you'll find browser's compatibility.
It is possible to achieve the same result as nested forms, but without nesting them.
HTML5 introduced the form attribute. You can add the form attribute to form controls outside of a form to link them to a specific form element (by id).
https://www.impressivewebs.com/html5-form-attribute/
This way you can structure your html like this:
<form id="main-form" action="/main-action" method="post"></form>
<form id="sub-form" action="/sub-action" method="post"></form>
<div class="main-component">
<input type="text" name="main-property1" form="main-form" />
<input type="text" name="main-property2" form="main-form" />
<div class="sub-component">
<input type="text" name="sub-property1" form="sub-form" />
<input type="text" name="sub-property2" form="sub-form" />
<input type="submit" name="sub-save" value="Save" form="sub-form" />
</div>
<input type="submit" name="main-save" value="Save" form="main-form" />
</div>
The form attribute is supported by all modern browsers. IE does not support this though but IE is not a browser anymore, rather a compatibility tool, as confirmed by Microsoft itself: https://www.zdnet.com/article/microsoft-security-chief-ie-is-not-a-browser-so-stop-using-it-as-your-default/. It's about time we stop caring about making things work in IE.
https://caniuse.com/#feat=form-attribute
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/form-control-infrastructure.html#attr-fae-form
From the html spec:
This feature allows authors to work around the lack of support for
nested form elements.
The second form will be ignored, see the snippet from WebKit for example:
bool HTMLParser::formCreateErrorCheck(Token* t, RefPtr<Node>& result)
{
// Only create a new form if we're not already inside one.
// This is consistent with other browsers' behavior.
if (!m_currentFormElement) {
m_currentFormElement = new HTMLFormElement(formTag, m_document);
result = m_currentFormElement;
pCloserCreateErrorCheck(t, result);
}
return false;
}
Plain html cannot allow you to do this. But with javascript you can be able to do that.
If you are using javascript/jquery you could classify your form elements with a class and then use serialize() to serialize only those form elements for the subset of the items you want to submit.
<form id="formid">
<input type="text" class="class1" />
<input type="text" class="class2">
</form>
Then in your javascript you could do this to serialize class1 elements
$(".class1").serialize();
For class2 you could do
$(".class2").serialize();
For the whole form
$("#formid").serialize();
or simply
$("#formid").submit();
If you're using AngularJS, any <form> tags inside your ng-app are replaced at runtime with ngForm directives that are designed to be nested.
In Angular forms can be nested. This means that the outer form is valid when all of the child forms are valid as well. However, browsers do not allow nesting of <form> elements, so Angular provides the ngForm directive which behaves identically to <form> but can be nested. This allows you to have nested forms, which is very useful when using Angular validation directives in forms that are dynamically generated using the ngRepeat directive. (source)
Another way to get around this problem, if you are using some server side scripting language that allows you to manipulate the posted data, is to declare your html form like this :
<form>
<input name="a_name"/>
<input name="a_second_name"/>
<input name="subform[another_name]"/>
<input name="subform[another_second_name]"/>
</form>
If you print the posted data (I will use PHP here), you will get an array like this :
//print_r($_POST) will output :
array(
'a_name' => 'a_name_value',
'a_second_name' => 'a_second_name_value',
'subform' => array(
'another_name' => 'a_name_value',
'another_second_name' => 'another_second_name_value',
),
);
Then you can just do something like :
$my_sub_form_data = $_POST['subform'];
unset($_POST['subform']);
Your $_POST now has only your "main form" data, and your subform data is stored in another variable you can manipulate at will.
Hope this helps!
As Craig said, no.
But, regarding your comment as to why:
It might be easier to use 1 <form> with the inputs and the "Update" button, and use copy hidden inputs with the "Submit Order" button in a another <form>.
Note you are not allowed to nest FORM elements!
http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/html3/forms.html
https://www.w3.org/TR/html4/appendix/changes.html#h-A.3.9 (html4 specification notes no changes regarding nesting forms from 3.2 to 4)
https://www.w3.org/TR/html4/appendix/changes.html#h-A.1.1.12 (html4 specification notes no changes regarding nesting forms from 4.0 to 4.1)
https://www.w3.org/TR/html5-diff/ (html5 specification notes no changes regarding nesting forms from 4 to 5)
https://www.w3.org/TR/html5/forms.html#association-of-controls-and-forms comments to "This feature allows authors to work around the lack of support for nested form elements.", but does not cite where this is specified, I think they are assuming that we should assume that it's specified in the html3 specification :)
You can also use formaction="" inside the button tag.
<button type="submit" formaction="/rmDog" method='post' id="rmDog">-</button>
This would be nested in the original form as a separate button.
A simple workaround is to use a iframe to hold the "nested" form.
Visually the form is nested but on the code side its in a separate html file altogether.
Even if you could get it to work in one browser, there's no guarantee that it would work the same in all browsers. So while you might be able to get it to work some of the time, you certainly wouldn't be able to get it to work all of the time.
While I don't present a solution to nested forms (it doesn't work reliably), I do present a workaround that works for me:
Usage scenario: A superform allowing to change N items at once. It has a "Submit All" button at the bottom. Each item wants to have its own nested form with a "Submit Item # N" button. But can't...
In this case, one can actually use a single form, and then have the name of the buttons be submit_1..submit_N and submitAll and handle it servers-side, by only looking at params ending in _1 if the name of the button was submit_1.
<form>
<div id="item1">
<input type="text" name="foo_1" value="23">
<input type="submit" name="submit_1" value="Submit Item #1">
</div>
<div id="item2">
<input type="text" name="foo_2" value="33">
<input type="submit" name="submit_2" value="Submit Item #2">
</div>
<input type="submit" name="submitAll" value="Submit All Items">
</form>
Ok, so not much of an invention, but it does the job.
Use empty form tag before your nested form
Tested and Worked on Firefox, Chrome
Not Tested on I.E.
<form name="mainForm" action="mainAction">
<form></form>
<form name="subForm" action="subAction">
</form>
</form>
EDIT by #adusza: As the commenters pointed out, the above code does not result in nested forms. However, if you add div elements like below, you will have subForm inside mainForm, and the first blank form will be removed.
<form name="mainForm" action="mainAction">
<div>
<form></form>
<form name="subForm" action="subAction">
</form>
</div>
</form>
Although the question is pretty old and I agree with the #everyone that nesting of form is not allowed in HTML
But this something all might want to see this
where you can hack(I'm calling it a hack since I'm sure this ain't legitimate) html to allow browser to have nested form
<form id="form_one" action="http://apple.com">
<div>
<div>
<form id="form_two" action="/">
<!-- DUMMY FORM TO ALLOW BROWSER TO ACCEPT NESTED FORM -->
</form>
</div>
<br/>
<div>
<form id="form_three" action="http://www.linuxtopia.org/">
<input type='submit' value='LINUX TOPIA'/>
</form>
</div>
<br/>
<div>
<form id="form_four" action="http://bing.com">
<input type='submit' value='BING'/>
</form>
</div>
<br/>
<input type='submit' value='Apple'/>
</div>
</form>
JS FIDDLE LINK
http://jsfiddle.net/nzkEw/10/
About nesting forms: I spent 10 years one afternoon trying to debug an ajax script.
my previous answer/example didn't account for the html markup, sorry.
<form id='form_1' et al>
<input stuff>
<submit onClick='ajaxFunction(That_Puts_form_2_In_The_ajaxContainer)'>
<td id='ajaxContainer'></td>
</form>
form_2 constantly failed saying invalid form_2.
When I moved the ajaxContainer that produced form_2 <i>outside</i> of form_1, I was back in business. It the answer the question as to why one might nest forms. I mean, really, what's the ID for if not to define which form is to be used? There must be a better, slicker work around.
No you cannot have a nested form. Instead you can open up a Modal that contains form and perform Ajax form submit.
Really not possible...
I couldn't nest form tags...
However I used this code:
<form>
OTHER FORM STUFF
<div novalidate role="form" method="post" id="fake_form_id_0" data-url="YOUR_POST_URL">
THIS FORM STUFF
</div>
</form>
with {% csrf_token %} and stuff
and applied some JS
var url = $(form_id).attr("data-url");
$.ajax({
url: url,
"type": "POST",
"data": {
'csrfmiddlewaretoken': '{{ csrf_token }}',
'custom-param-attachment': 'value'
},
success: function (e, data) {
if (e.is_valid) {
DO STUFF
}
}
});
Today, I also got stuck in same issue, and resolve the issue I have added a user control and
on this control I use this code
<div class="divformTagEx">
</div>
<asp:Literal runat="server" ID="litFormTag" Visible="false">
'<div> <form style="margin-bottom: 3;" action="http://login.php" method="post" name="testformtag"></form> </div>'</asp:Literal>
and on PreRenderComplete event of the page call this method
private void InitializeJavaScript()
{
var script = new StringBuilder();
script.Append("$(document).ready(function () {");
script.Append("$('.divformTagEx').append( ");
script.Append(litFormTag.Text);
script.Append(" )");
script.Append(" });");
ScriptManager.RegisterStartupScript(this, GetType(), "nestedFormTagEx", script.ToString(), true);
}
I believe this will help.
Before I knew I wasn't supposed to do this I had nested forms for the purpose of having multiple submit buttons. Ran that way for 18 months, thousands of signup transactions, no one called us about any difficulties.
Nested forms gave me an ID to parse for the correct action to take. Didn't break 'til I tried to attach a field to one of the buttons and Validate complained. Wasn't a big deal to untangle it--I used an explicit stringify on the outer form so it didn't matter the submit and form didn't match. Yeah, yeah, should've taken the buttons from a submit to an onclick.
Point is there are circumstances where it's not entirely broken. But "not entirely broken" is perhaps too low a standard to shoot for :-)
[see thecode.. code format below ]2simple trick
simply dont use other inside another form tag, please use the same elements without using form tag.
see example below
"" dont use another form // just recall the enter image description hereelement in it""

Create simple form that redirects to a webpage

Long and short, I had a form input button on my site that worked as an access code to redirect to a specific page on the site. Site broke, and now I don't remember the code I had in place. It was done a long time ago and I only had to do it once. But the gist of it looks like this:
For example the address to site is www.brokensite.com. I had a form input field on the page where the value of the input field when submitted redirected to the page www.brokensite.com/inputvalue. So if I input the access code of helpme, it would redirect to www.brokensite.com/helpme
My current code is:
<form action="/after-school-registration/" method="$_GET" name="access">
<input name="code" value="" type="Text">
<input value="Go" type="Submit">
</form>
Please tell me what I am missing. Or what I did wrong this time. Any help is appreciated.
You could use JavaScript and set the location:
<form>
<input id='urlpage' />
<button type="button" onclick="window.location.href='/after-school-registration/' + document.getElementById('urlpage').value">Go</button>
</form>

html5: how to get an "its empty" message box if the form to be submitted is empty

I have an HTML5 form that calls a Perl controller to upload files to the server. It works. The thing is that if no file is selected (if the form box is left blank), and the user clicks the button, he will get a nasty Perl error message ("require file at ... line 39 etc"). I want to add a feature that if the form is left in blank, a message will appear saying "It's empty!". Can this be done only with HTML5, in the view? Or I need to modify my Perl script?
My HTMl5 looks like:
<form action="[% uri_for('/upload/execution') %]" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data" class="form-horizontal">
<filedset>
<div class="control-group">
<p>
<div class="controls">
<input readonly value="[% article.article_id %]" name="article_id" type="hidden" class="span1" id="game_id">
</div>
</p>
<p>
<div class="form-actions">
<input type="submit" value="upload" class="btn btn-primary">
</div>
</p>
</filedset>
</form>
You can use javascript to validate your request.
See this question, there is a good code sample.
Of course this is only client side validation (ie. it's done in browser), so anyone can turn it off and send the file anyway (although this rarely happens). It would be a good practice to handle this also on a script level.

Need to add submit button that will email the form's data to me

Here is my "form" http://www.confidentialpatient.com/js/index.html
I need to add a few things to this:
The person, once finished adding "items," clicks "NEXT"
On the next page, a summary of the items selected on the previous page is given (in a list format). Basically, this is a confirmation page
They are then able to click "SUBMIT," in which this form data is emailed to me.
I know this might be a lot, but I'd greatly appreciate any insight!
You can not do this without a server-side scripting language. The few choices you have are PHP, ASP.NET, PERL or Python.
For your reference, I have mentioned a test script along with PHP code to submit a form with only one field and then receive that information on the next page and then display it to the user in an h2 tag.
Code for page 1:
<form method="post" action="page2.html">
<h1>This is a test form</h1>
<label>Enter your full name</label>
<input type="text" name="fullname" />
<input type="submit" name="submit" value="Submit Form" />
</form>
Code for page 2 (Receiving page):
<?php
$name = $_POST['fullname'];
?>
<h2>You submitted name is: <?php echo $name; ?> </h2>

How to get the Form result in div?

Hi i have this html code to submit the data to google
<form name="input" action="http://www.google.com" method="get">
Username: <input type="text" name="user">
<input type="submit" value="Submit">
</form>
<div id="result"></div>
when i type words to search and click submit button,it should go to google.com,it should get the result and that result should be displayed in div..how can i do thar... thanks in advance
You can, with some limitations, have the results of form submissions to be displayed inside the current page (containing the form) by using a target attribute in the form tag. The attribute value should match the value of a name attribute in an iframe element on the page. You can wrap the iframe element inside a div element, of course.
However, this won’t work in the given case. First, the form is not a Google search form. To launch a search, the action attribute should be e.g. http://www.google.fi/search, and the form should contain a field named by Google naming conventions; q is the name for a keywords input item. Second, and more seriously, Google just does not let you do that. In HTTP headers, it says X-Frame-Options SAMEORIGIN, which means that you cannot get the results inside a frame on a page at your site.
You will have to use javascript for this. Also, use the Inner Frame for this. And the code will be something like:
<form name="input" action="html_form_action.asp" method="get">
Username: <input type="text" name="user">
<input type="submit" value="Submit" onclick="function1">
</form>
<div id="result">
<iframe src="http://www.google.com/" border-style:solid;">
</iframe>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
function1(){
var el=document.getElementById("result")
el.innerHTML="<iframe src=\"http://www.google.com\"></iframe>"
}
</script>