[46] | 1 | =head1 NAME |
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| 2 | |
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| 3 | Examples - Sample uses of Text::FormBuilder |
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| 4 | |
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| 5 | =head1 EXAMPLES |
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| 6 | |
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| 7 | =head2 Event Form |
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| 8 | |
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| 9 | This is the formspec for an input form for an event calendar. It exercises many |
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| 10 | of the features of the formspec language. This is close to a real world project |
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| 11 | that I have been developing. |
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| 12 | |
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| 13 | !title Add Event |
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| 14 | !author Peter Eichman |
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| 15 | !description { |
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| 16 | Start and end times are not required, but are recommended. If you leave |
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| 17 | both of them blank, the event will be considered an all day event. |
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| 18 | } |
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| 19 | |
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| 20 | !pattern TIME /^\s*\d{1,2}(:\d{2})?(\s*[ap]m)?\s*$/ |
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| 21 | !pattern DAY /^\s*(([1-3][0-9])|[1-9])\s*$/ |
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| 22 | !pattern YEAR /^\s*\d{4}\s*$/ |
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| 23 | |
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| 24 | !list MONTHS { |
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| 25 | 1[January], 2[February], 3[March], 4[April], |
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| 26 | 5[May], 6[June], 7[July], 8[August], |
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| 27 | 9[September], 10[October], 11[November], 12[December] |
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| 28 | } |
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| 29 | |
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| 30 | !group DATE { |
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| 31 | month@MONTHS//VALUE |
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| 32 | day[2]//DAY |
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| 33 | year[4]//YEAR |
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| 34 | } |
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| 35 | |
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| 36 | !group TIME { |
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| 37 | start[8]|' '//TIME? |
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| 38 | end[8]|''[(hh:mm am/pm)]//TIME? |
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| 39 | } |
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| 40 | |
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| 41 | !group SERIES { |
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| 42 | old|Existing:select |
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| 43 | new[40]|or New |
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| 44 | } |
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| 45 | |
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| 46 | # input fields start here |
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| 47 | |
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| 48 | event_type:select//VALUE |
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| 49 | |
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| 50 | title[60]//VALUE |
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| 51 | |
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| 52 | !field %DATE date |
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| 53 | !field %TIME time |
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| 54 | |
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| 55 | series_old|Existing series:select |
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| 56 | series_new[60]|New series |
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| 57 | |
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| 58 | description[6,60]:textarea |
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| 59 | contact[60] |
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| 60 | email[40]//EMAIL? |
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| 61 | location[60] |
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| 62 | url[60]|Website |
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| 63 | |
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| 64 | Both of the fields C<event_type> and C<series_old> get filled in |
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| 65 | from a database in the actual CGI script. The relevant bits of |
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| 66 | the CGI script which uses this form go something like this: |
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| 67 | |
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| 68 | # the module containing the FormBuilder-building code |
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| 69 | use Calendar::Forms::AddEvent; |
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| 70 | my $form = Calendar::Forms::AddEvent::get_form($q); |
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| 71 | |
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| 72 | # now we have a CGI::FormBuilder object in $form |
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| 73 | |
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| 74 | # fill in dropdown lists |
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| 75 | $form->field(name => 'event_type', values => \@event_types); |
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| 76 | $form->field(name => 'series_old', values => \@existing_series); |
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| 77 | |
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| 78 | unless ($form->submitted && $form->validate) { |
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| 79 | print $q->header; |
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| 80 | print $form->render; |
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| 81 | } else { |
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| 82 | # process the data ... |
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| 83 | } |
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| 84 | |
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| 85 | =head1 CGI::FormBuilder EXAMPLES |
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| 86 | |
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| 87 | Here are some of L<CGI::FormBuilder>'s examples, translated into |
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| 88 | Text::FormBuilder's terms. |
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| 89 | |
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| 90 | =head2 Ex1: order.cgi |
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| 91 | |
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| 92 | Formspec F<example1>: |
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| 93 | |
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| 94 | !title Order Info |
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| 95 | |
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| 96 | !list STATES { |
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| 97 | AL, AK, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GE, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, |
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| 98 | KY, LA, ME, MD, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM, NY, NC, |
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| 99 | ND, OH, OK, OR, PA, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, WA, WV, WI, WY |
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| 100 | } |
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| 101 | |
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| 102 | first_name |
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| 103 | last_name |
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| 104 | email//EMAIL |
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| 105 | address |
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| 106 | state@STATES |
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| 107 | zipcode//ZIPCODE |
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| 108 | credit_card//CARD |
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| 109 | details[10,50]:textarea |
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| 110 | |
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| 111 | Parse and create F<Example1.pm>: |
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| 112 | |
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| 113 | $ perl -MText::FormBuilder \ |
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| 114 | -e'Text::FormBuilder->parse("example1")->build(method => "POST") \ |
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| 115 | ->write_module("MyForms::Example1")' |
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| 116 | |
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| 117 | Script: |
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| 118 | |
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| 119 | #!/usr/bin/perl -w |
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| 120 | use strict; |
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| 121 | |
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| 122 | use CGI; # you have to use CGI.pm explicitly |
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| 123 | use MyForms::Example1; |
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| 124 | |
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| 125 | my $q = CGI->new; |
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| 126 | |
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| 127 | my $form = MyForms::Example1::get_form($q); |
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| 128 | |
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| 129 | # try to validate it first |
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| 130 | if ($form->submitted && $form->validate) { |
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| 131 | # ... more code goes here to do stuff ... |
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| 132 | print $form->confirm; |
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| 133 | } else { |
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| 134 | print $form->render; |
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| 135 | } |
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| 136 | |
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| 137 | =head2 Ex2: order_form.cgi |
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| 138 | |
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| 139 | You can also include the formspec in your script; the only downside to this |
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| 140 | is that your script has to parse the spec every time it gets called, so this |
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| 141 | method is definitely I<not> recommended for high-traffic forms. |
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| 142 | |
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| 143 | Script F<order_form.cgi>: |
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| 144 | |
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| 145 | #!/usr/bin/perl -w |
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| 146 | use strict; |
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| 147 | |
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| 148 | use CGI; # you have to use CGI.pm explicitly |
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| 149 | use Text::FormBuilder; |
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| 150 | |
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| 151 | my $parser = Text::FormBuilder->parse_text(q[ |
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| 152 | first_name |
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| 153 | last_name |
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| 154 | email |
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| 155 | address |
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| 156 | state@STATE |
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| 157 | zipcode |
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| 158 | credit_card |
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| 159 | details[10,50]:textarea |
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| 160 | ]); |
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| 161 | |
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| 162 | my $q = CGI->new; |
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| 163 | $parser->build(params => $q, method => 'POST', smartness => 2, debug => 2); |
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| 164 | |
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| 165 | my $form = $parser->form; |
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| 166 | |
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| 167 | # try to validate it first |
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| 168 | if ($form->submitted && $form->validate) { |
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| 169 | # ... more code goes here to do stuff ... |
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| 170 | print $form->confirm; |
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| 171 | } else { |
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| 172 | print $form->render; |
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| 173 | } |
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| 174 | |
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| 175 | =head2 Ex4: user_info.cgi |
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| 176 | |
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| 177 | #!/usr/bin/perl -w |
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| 178 | use strict; |
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| 179 | |
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| 180 | use Text::FormBuilder; |
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| 181 | use CGI; |
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| 182 | use DBI; |
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| 183 | |
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| 184 | my $dbh = DBI->connect('dbi:Oracle:db', 'user', 'pass'); |
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| 185 | |
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| 186 | my $parser = Text::FormBuilder->parse_text(q[ |
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| 187 | username |
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| 188 | password |
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| 189 | confirm_password |
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| 190 | first_name |
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| 191 | last_name |
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| 192 | email |
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| 193 | ]); |
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| 194 | |
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| 195 | |
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| 196 | my $q = CGI->new; |
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| 197 | my $form = $parser->build(params => $q)->form; |
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| 198 | |
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| 199 | # Now get the value of the username from our app |
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| 200 | my $user = $form->cgi_param('user'); |
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| 201 | my $sth = $dbh->prepare("select * from user_info where user = '$user'"); |
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| 202 | $sth->execute; |
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| 203 | my $default_hashref = $sth->fetchrow_hashref; |
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| 204 | # Render our form with the defaults we got in our hashref |
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| 205 | print $form->render(values => $default_hashref, |
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| 206 | title => "User information for '$user'", |
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| 207 | ); |
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| 208 | |
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| 209 | =head1 SEE ALSO |
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| 210 | |
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| 211 | L<Text::FormBuilder>, |
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| 212 | L<CGI::FormBuilder> |
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| 213 | |
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| 214 | =head1 AUTHOR |
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| 215 | |
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| 216 | Peter Eichman, C<< <peichman@cpan.org> >> |
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| 217 | |
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| 218 | =head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE |
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| 219 | |
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| 220 | Copyright E<copy>2004 by Peter Eichman. |
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| 221 | |
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| 222 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
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| 223 | modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. |
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| 224 | |
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| 225 | =cut |
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