This document is also available in these non-normative formats: single HTML file diff-marked HTML Zip archive .
The English version of this specification is the only normative version. See also translations.
Copyright ©2005 W3C® (MIT, ERCIM, Keio), All Rights Reserved. W3C liability, trademark and document use rules apply.
XForms is an XML application that represents the next generation of forms for the Web. By splitting traditional XHTML forms into three parts—XForms model, instance data, and user interface—it separates presentation from content, allows reuse, gives strong typing—reducing the number of round-trips to the server, as well as offering device independence and a reduced need for scripting.
XForms is not a free-standing document type, but is intended to be integrated into other markup languages, such as XHTML or SVG.
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at http://www.w3.org/TR/.
This document is a W3C Proposed Edited Recommendation, a revised edition of XForms 1.0. It reflects clarifications and corrections as a result of nearly two years of use by the community. The list of errata and a diff-marked version against the 14 October 2003 version of the XForms 1.0 Recommendation are available.
There is one correction that affects conformance. Erratum
E69a
adds instance
to the list of attributes for
submission
. Without this correction, the intended use
of instance replacement is typically not achievable in practice.
Furthermore, implementations already support this attribute. So
this correction was added to align specification with
implementations.
The W3C XForms Working Group has released a public test suite for XForms 1.0 along with an implementation report. A list of known XForms Implementations is available.
W3C Advisory Committee Representatives are invited to submit their formal review per the instructions in the Call for Review (see Advisory Committee questionnaires). Members of the public are also invited to send comments on this Proposed Edited Recommendation to www-forms-editor@w3.org (archive). The review period ends on 3 November 2005.
Publication as a Proposed Edited Recommendation does not imply endorsement by the W3C Membership. This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.
This document has been produced by the W3C XForms Working Group as part of the XForms Activity within the W3C Interaction Domain.
This document was produced under the 24 January 2002 CPP as amended by the W3C Patent Policy Transition Procedure. The Working Group maintains a public list of patent disclosures relevant to this document; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) with respect to this specification should disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.
1 About the XForms 1.0
Specification
1.1 Background
1.2 Reading the
Specification
1.3 How the
Specification is Organized
1.4 Documentation Conventions
2 Introduction to XForms
2.1 An
Example
2.2 Providing XML Instance Data
2.3 Constraining
Values
2.4 Multiple
Forms per Document
3 Document Structure
3.1 The
XForms Namespace
3.2 XForms Core
Attribute Collections
3.2.1 Common Attributes
3.2.2 Linking Attributes
3.2.3 Single-Node Binding
Attributes
3.2.4 Node-Set Binding Attributes
3.2.5 Model Item Property Attributes
3.3 The
XForms Core Module
3.3.1 The model Element
3.3.2 The instance Element
3.3.3 The submission Element
3.3.4 The bind Element
3.4 The
XForms MustUnderstand Module
3.5 The XForms
Extension Module
3.5.1 The extension Element
4 Processing Model
4.1 Events
Overview
4.2 Initialization
Events
4.2.1 The xforms-model-construct Event
4.2.2 The xforms-model-construct-done
Event
4.2.3 The xforms-ready Event
4.2.4 The xforms-model-destruct Event
4.3 Interaction
Events
4.3.1 The xforms-next and xforms-previous Events
4.3.2 The xforms-focus Event
4.3.3 The xforms-help and xforms-hint Events
4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event
4.3.5 The xforms-revalidate Event
4.3.6 The xforms-recalculate Event
4.3.7 The xforms-rebuild Event
4.3.8 The xforms-reset Event
4.3.9 The xforms-submit Event
4.4 Notification
Events
4.4.1 The DOMActivate Event
4.4.2 The xforms-value-changed Event
4.4.3 The xforms-select and xforms-deselect Events
4.4.4 The xforms-scroll-first and xforms-scroll-last
Events
4.4.5 The xforms-insert and xforms-delete Events
4.4.6 The xforms-valid Event
4.4.7 The xforms-invalid Event
4.4.8 The DOMFocusIn Event
4.4.9 The DOMFocusOut Event
4.4.10 The xforms-readonly Event
4.4.11 The xforms-readwrite Event
4.4.12 The xforms-required Event
4.4.13 The xforms-optional Event
4.4.14 The xforms-enabled Event
4.4.15 The xforms-disabled Event
4.4.16 The xforms-in-range Event
4.4.17 The xforms-out-of-range Event
4.4.18 The xforms-submit-done Event
4.4.19 The xforms-submit-error Event
4.5 Error
Indications
4.5.1 The xforms-binding-exception Event
4.5.2 The xforms-link-exception Event
4.5.3 The xforms-link-error Event
4.5.4 The xforms-compute-exception Event
4.6 Event
Sequencing
4.6.1 For input, secret, textarea, range, or upload
Controls
4.6.2 For output Controls
4.6.3 For select or select1 Controls
4.6.4 For trigger Controls
4.6.5 For submit Controls
4.6.6 Sequence: Selection Without Value
Change
4.6.7 Sequence: Value Change
4.6.8 Sequence: Activating a Trigger
4.6.9 Sequence: Submission
5 Datatypes
5.1 XML Schema
Built-in Datatypes
5.2 XForms
Datatypes
5.2.1 xforms:listItem
5.2.2 xforms:listItems
5.2.3 xforms:dayTimeDuration
5.2.4 xforms:yearMonthDuration
6 Model Item Properties
6.1 Model Item Property Definitions
6.1.1 The type Property
6.1.2 The readonly Property
6.1.3 The required Property
6.1.4 The relevant Property
6.1.5 The calculate Property
6.1.6 The constraint Property
6.1.7 The p3ptype Property
6.2 Schema
Constraints
6.2.1 Atomic Datatype
7 XPath Expressions in XForms
7.1 XPath
Datatypes
7.2 Feature
string for the hasFeature method call
7.3 Instance
Data
7.3.1 The getInstanceDocument() Method
7.3.2 The rebuild() Method
7.3.3 The recalculate() Method
7.3.4 The revalidate() Method
7.3.5 The refresh() Method
7.4 Evaluation
Context
7.5 Binding Expressions
7.5.1 Dynamic Dependencies
7.5.2 Model Binding Expressions
7.5.3 UI Binding Expressions
7.5.4 UI Binding in other XML vocabularies
7.5.5 Binding Examples
7.6 XForms Core
Function Library
7.7 Boolean
Functions
7.7.1 The boolean-from-string()
Function
7.7.2 The if() Function
7.8 Number
Functions
7.8.1 The avg() Function
7.8.2 The min() Function
7.8.3 The max() Function
7.8.4 The count-non-empty() Function
7.8.5 The index() Function
7.9 String
Functions
7.9.1 The property() Function
7.10 Date and Time
Functions
7.10.1 The now() Function
7.10.2 The days-from-date() Function
7.10.3 The seconds-from-dateTime()
Function
7.10.4 The seconds() Function
7.10.5 The months() Function
7.11 Node-set
Functions
7.11.1 The instance() Function
7.12 Extension
Functions
8 Form Controls
8.1 The XForms Form
Controls Module
8.1.1 Implementation Requirements Common to All Form
Controls
8.1.2 The input Element
8.1.3 The secret Element
8.1.4 The textarea Element
8.1.5 The output Element
8.1.6 The upload Element
8.1.7 The range Element
8.1.8 The trigger Element
8.1.9 The submit Element
8.1.10 The select Element
8.1.11 The select1 Element
8.2 Common Markup
for Selection Controls
8.2.1 The choices Element
8.2.2 The item Element
8.2.3 The value Element
8.3 Additional
Elements
8.3.1 The filename Element
8.3.2 The mediatype Element
8.3.3 The label Element
8.3.4 The help Element
8.3.5 The hint Element
8.3.6 The alert Element
9 XForms User Interface
9.1 The XForms Group
Module
9.1.1 The group Element
9.2 The XForms Switch
Module
9.2.1 The switch Element
9.2.2 The case Element
9.2.3 The toggle Element
9.3 The XForms Repeat
Module
9.3.1 The repeat Element
9.3.2 Creating Repeating Structures Via
Attributes
9.3.3 The itemset Element
9.3.4 The copy Element
9.3.5 The insert Element
9.3.6 The delete Element
9.3.7 The setindex Element
9.3.8 Repeat Processing
9.3.9 Nested Repeats
9.3.10 User Interface Interaction
10 XForms Actions
10.1 The XForms Action
Module
10.1.1 The action Element
10.1.2 The dispatch Element
10.1.3 The rebuild Element
10.1.4 The recalculate Element
10.1.5 The revalidate Element
10.1.6 The refresh Element
10.1.7 The setfocus Element
10.1.8 The load Element
10.1.9 The setvalue Element
10.1.10 The send Element
10.1.11 The reset Element
10.1.12 The message Element
10.1.13 Actions insert, delete and setindex
11 Submit
11.1 The
xforms-submit Event
11.2 Submission
Options
11.3 Serialization
as application/xml
11.4 Serialization as multipart/related
11.5 Serialization as multipart/form-data
11.6 Serialization as
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
11.7 The post,
multipart-post, form-data-post, and urlencoded-post Submit
Methods
11.8 The put Submit
Method
11.9 The get Submit
Method
12 Conformance
12.1 Conformance
Levels
12.1.1 XForms Full
12.2 Conformance
Description
12.2.1 Conforming XForms Processors
12.2.2 Conforming XForms Documents
12.2.3 Conforming XForms Generators
13 Glossary Of Terms
A Schema for XForms
A.1 Schema for XML
Events
B References
B.1 Normative
References
B.2 Informative References
C Privacy Considerations
C.1 Using P3P with
XForms
D Recalculation Sequence Algorithm
D.1 Details on Creating the Master
Dependency Directed Graph
D.2 Details on Creating the Pertinent
Dependency Subgraph
D.3 Details on Computing Individual
Vertices
D.4 Example of Calculation
Processing
E Input Modes
E.1 inputmode
Attribute Value Syntax
E.2 User Agent
Behavior
E.3 List of
Tokens
E.3.1 Script Tokens
E.3.2 Modifier Tokens
E.4 Relationship
to XML Schema pattern facets
E.5 Examples
F XForms and Styling (Non-Normative)
F.1 Pseudo-classes
F.2 Pseudo-elements
F.3 Examples
G Complete XForms Examples
(Non-Normative)
G.1 XForms in
XHTML
G.2 Editing Hierarchical Bookmarks Using
XForms
G.3 Survey Using XForms
and SVG
H Changelog (Non-Normative)
I Acknowledgments (Non-Normative)
J Production Notes
(Non-Normative)
Forms are an important part of the Web, and they continue to be the primary means for enabling interactive Web applications. Web applications and electronic commerce solutions have sparked the demand for better Web forms with richer interactions. XForms 1.0 is the response to this demand, and provides a new platform-independent markup language for online interaction between a person (through an XForms Processor) and another, usually remote, agent. XForms are the successor to HTML forms, and benefit from the lessons learned from HTML forms.
Further background information on XForms can be found at http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/Forms.
This specification has been written with various types of readers in mind—in particular XForms authors and XForms implementors. We hope the specification will provide authors with the tools they need to write efficient, attractive and accessible documents without overexposing them to the XForms implementation details. Implementors, however, should find all they need to build conforming XForms Processors. The specification begins with a general presentation of XForms before specifying the technical details of the various XForms components.
The specification has been written with various modes of presentation in mind. In case of a discrepancy, the online electronic version is considered the authoritative version of the document.
This document uses the terms may, must, and should in accord with [RFC 2119].
The specification is organized into the following chapters:
An introduction to XForms. The introduction outlines the design principles and includes a brief tutorial on XForms.
XForms reference manual. The bulk of the reference manual consists of the specification of XForms. This reference defines XForms and how XForms Processors must interpret the various components in order to claim conformance.
Appendixes contain a normative description of XForms described in XML Schema, information on references, and other useful information.
Throughout this document, the following namespace prefixes and corresponding namespace identifiers are used:
xforms: The XForms namespace (http://www.w3.org/2002/xforms) 3.1 The XForms Namespace
html: The XHTML namespace (http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml) [XHTML 1.0]
xsd: The XML Schema namespace (http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema)[XML Schema part 1]
xsi: The XML Schema for instances namespace (http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance)[XML Schema part 1]
ev: The XML Events namespace (http://www.w3.org/2001/xml-events)[XML Events]
my: Any user defined namespace
This is only a convention; any namespace prefix may be used in practice.
The following typographical conventions are used to present technical material in this document.
Official terms are defined in the following manner: [Definition: You can find most terms in chapter 13 Glossary Of Terms]. Links to terms may be specially highlighted where necessary.
The XML representations of various elements within XForms are presented using the syntax for Abstract Modules in XHTML Modularization [XHTML Modularization].
Examples are set off typographically:
Example Item
References to external documents appear as follows: [Sample Reference] with links to the references section of this document.
The following typesetting convention is used for non-normative commentary:
Note:
A gentle explanation or admonition to readers.
XForms has been designed on the basis of several years' experience with HTML forms. HTML Forms have formed the backbone of the e-commerce revolution, and having shown their worth, have also indicated numerous ways they could be improved.
The primary difference when comparing XForms with HTML Forms, apart from XForms being in XML, is the separation of the data being collected from the markup of the controls collecting the individual values. By doing this, it not only makes XForms more tractable by making it clear what is being submitted where, it also eases reuse of forms, since the underlying essential part of a Form is no longer irretrievably bound to the page it is used in.
A second major difference is that XForms, while designed to be integrated into XHTML, is no longer restricted only to be a part of that language, but may be integrated into any suitable markup language.
XForms has striven to improve authoring, reuse, internationalization, accessibility, usability, and device independence. Here is a summary of the primary benefits of using XForms:
Submitted data is strongly typed and can be checked using off-the-shelf tools. This speeds up form filling since it reduces the need for round trips to the server for validation.
This obviates the need for custom server-side logic to marshal the submitted data to the application back-end. The received XML instance document can be directly validated and processed by the application back-end.
This obviates duplication, and ensures that updating the validation rules as a result of a change in the underlying business logic does not require re-authoring validation constraints within the XForms application.
This enables the XForms author to go beyond the basic set of constraints available from the back-end. Providing such additional constraints as part of the XForms Model enhances the overall usability of the resulting Web application.
Using XML 1.0 for instance data ensures that the submitted data is internationalization ready.
XForms separates content and presentation. User interface controls encapsulate all relevant metadata such as labels, thereby enhancing accessibility of the application when using different modalities. XForms user interface controls are generic and suited for device-independence.
The high-level nature of the user interface controls, and the consequent intent-based authoring of the user interface makes it possible to re-target the user interaction to different devices.
By defining XML-based declarative event handlers that cover common use cases, the majority of XForms documents can be statically analyzed, reducing the need for imperative scripts for event handlers.
In the XForms approach, forms are comprised of a section that describes what the form does, called the XForms Model, and another section that describes how the form is to be presented.
Consider a simple electronic commerce form that might be rendered as follows:
It is clear that we are collecting a value that represents whether cash or credit card is being used, and if a credit card, its number and expiration date.
This can be represented in the XForms model
element, which in XHTML would typically be contained within the
head
section:
<xforms:model> <xforms:instance> <ecommerce xmlns=""> <method/> <number/> <expiry/> </ecommerce> </xforms:instance> <xforms:submission action="http://example.com/submit" method="post" id="submit" includenamespaceprefixes=""/> </xforms:model>
This simply says that we are collecting three pieces of
information (note that we have as yet not said anything about their
types), and that they will be submitted using the URL in the
action
attribute.
XForms 1.0 defines a device-neutral, platform-independent set of
form controls
suitable for general-purpose use. The controls are bound
to the XForms Model via the XForms binding mechanism, in this
simple case using the ref
attribute on the controls.
In XHTML, this markup would typically appear within the
body
section (note that we have intentionally
defaulted the XForms namespace prefix here):
<select1 ref="method"> <label>Select Payment Method:</label> <item> <label>Cash</label> <value>cash</value> </item> <item> <label>Credit</label> <value>cc</value> </item> </select1> <input ref="number"> <label>Credit Card Number:</label> </input> <input ref="expiry"> <label>Expiration Date:</label> </input> <submit submission="submit"> <label>Submit</label> </submit>
Notice the following features of this design:
The user interface is not hard-coded to use radio buttons. Different devices (such as voice browsers) can render the concept of "select one" as appropriate.
Form controls always have labels directly associated with them as child elements—this is a key feature designed to enhance accessibility.
There is no need for an enclosing form
element, as
in HTML. (See 2.4 Multiple Forms
per Document for details on how to author multiple forms
per document)
Markup for specifying form controls has been simplified in comparison with HTML forms.
The fact that you can bind form controls to the model like this simplifies integrating XForms into other host languages, since any form control markup may be used to bind to the model.
The XForms Processor can directly submit the data collected as XML. In the example, the submitted data would look like this:
<ecommerce> <method>cc</method> <number>1235467789012345</number> <expiry>2001-08</expiry> </ecommerce>
XForms processing keeps track of the state of the partially
filled form through this instance data. Initial values for the
instance data may be provided or left empty as in the example.
Element instance
essentially holds a skeleton XML
document that gets updated as the user fills out the form. It gives
the author full control on the structure of the submitted XML data,
including namespace information. When the form is submitted, the
instance data is serialized as an XML document. Here is an
alternative version of the earlier example:
<xforms:model> <xforms:instance> <payment method="cc" xmlns="http://commerce.example.com/payment"> <number/> <expiry/> </payment> </xforms:instance> <xforms:submission action="http://example.com/submit" method="post" includenamespaceprefixes="#default"/> </xforms:model>
In this case the submitted data would look like this:
<payment method="cc" xmlns="http://commerce.example.com/payment"> <number>1235467789012345</number> <expiry>2001-08</expiry> </payment>
This design has features worth calling out:
There is complete flexibility in the structure of the XML instance data, including the use of attributes. Notice that XML namespaces are used, and that a wrapper element of the author's choosing contains the instance data.
Empty elements number
and expiry
serve
as place-holders in the XML structure, and will be filled in with
form data provided by the user.
An initial value ("cc"
) for the form control is
provided through the instance data, in this case an attribute
method
. In the submitted XML, this initial value will
be replaced by the user input, if the user changes the form control
displaying that data.
To connect this instance data with form controls, the
ref
attributes on the form controls need to be changed
to point to the proper part of the instance data, using binding
expressions:
ref
... xmlns:my="http://commerce.example.com/payment" ... <xforms:select1 ref="@method">...</xforms:select1> ... <xforms:input ref="my:number">...</xforms:input> ... <xforms:input ref="/my:payment/my:expiry">...</xforms:input>
Binding expressions are based on XPath [XPath 1.0], including the use of the
@
character to refer to attributes, as seen here. Note
that for illustrative purposes, the first two expressions make use
of the XPath context node, which defaults to the top-level element
(here my:payment
). The third expression shows an
absolute path.
XForms allows data to be checked for validity as the form is
being filled. In the absence of specific information about the
types of values being collected, all values are returned as
strings, but it is possible to assign types to values in the
instance data. In this example, number
should accept
digits only, and should have between 14 and 18 digits and
expiry
should accept only valid month/date
combinations.
Furthermore, the credit card information form controls for
number
and expiry
are only relevant if
the "cc"
option is chosen for method
, but
are required in that case.
By specifying an additional component, model item
properties, authors can include rich declarative validation
information in forms. Such information can be taken from XML
Schemas as well as XForms-specific additions, such as
relevant
. Such properties appear on bind
elements, while Schema constraints are expressed in an
XML Schema fragment, either inline or external. For example:
... xmlns:my="http://commerce.example.com/payment"... <xforms:model> ... <xforms:bind nodeset="/my:payment/my:number" relevant="/my:payment/@method = 'cc'" required="true()" type="my:ccnumber"/> <xforms:bind nodeset="/my:payment/my:expiry" relevant="/my:payment/@method = 'cc'" required="true()" type="xsd:gYearMonth"/> <xsd:schema ...> ... <xsd:simpleType name="ccnumber"> <xsd:restriction base="xsd:string"> <xsd:pattern value="\d{14,18}"/> </xsd:restriction> </xsd:simpleType> ... </xsd:schema> </xforms:model>
Note:
In the above example, the relevant
expression uses
absolute XPath notation (beginning with /
) because the
evaluation context nodes for computed expressions are determined
by the bind
ref
binding
expression (see 7.4 Evaluation
Context), and so any relative node path in the first
bind
relevant
above would be relative to
/my:payment/my:number
XForms processing places no limits on the number of individual
forms that can be placed in a single containing document. When a
single document contains multiple forms, each form needs a separate
model
element, each with an id
attribute
so that they can be referenced from elsewhere in the containing
document.
In addition, form controls should specify which
model
element contains the instance data to which they
bind. This is accomplished through a model
attribute
that is part of the binding attributes. If no model
attribute is specified on the binding element, the nearest ancestor
binding element's model
attribute is used, and failing
that, the first XForms Model in document order is used. This
technique is called 'scoped resolution', and is used frequently in
XForms.
The next example adds an opinion poll to our electronic commerce form.
poll
model<xforms:model> <xforms:instance> ...payment instance data... </xforms:instance> <xforms:submission action="http://example.com/submit" method="post"/> </xforms:model> <xforms:model id="poll"> <xforms:instance> <helpful/> </xforms:instance> <xforms:submission id="pollsubmit" .../> </xforms:model>
Additionally, the following markup would appear in the body section of the document:
poll
model<xforms:select1 ref="/helpful" model="poll"> <xforms:label>How useful is this page to you?</xforms:label> <xforms:item> <xforms:label>Not at all helpful</xforms:label> <xforms:value>0</xforms:value> </xforms:item> <xforms:item> <xforms:label>Barely helpful</xforms:label> <xforms:value>1</xforms:value> </xforms:item> <xforms:item> <xforms:label>Somewhat helpful</xforms:label> <xforms:value>2</xforms:value> </xforms:item> <xforms:item> <xforms:label>Very helpful</xforms:label> <xforms:value>3</xforms:value> </xforms:item> </xforms:select1> <xforms:submit submission="pollsubmit"> <xforms:label>Submit</xforms:label> </xforms:submit>
The main difference here is the use of
model="poll"
, which identifies the instance. Note that
submit
refers to the submission
element
by ID and does not require binding attributes.
More XForms examples can be found in G Complete XForms Examples.
XForms 1.0 is an application of XML [XML 1.0] and has been designed for use within other XML vocabularies—in particular within a future version of XHTML [XHTML 1.0]. XForms always requires such a host language. This chapter discusses the structure of XForms that allow XForms to be used with other document types.
The XForms namespace has the URI:
http://www.w3.org/2002/xforms
.
XForms Processors must use the XML namespaces mechanism [XML Names] to recognize elements and attributes from this namespace.
The Common Attribute Collection applies to every element in the XForms namespace.
Foreign attributes are allowed on all XForms elements.
A host language must permit an attribute of type
xsd:ID
on each XForms element.
The Linking Attributes Collection applies to XForms elements which include a link to a remote resource.
The src
attribute assigns a URI to be automatically
retrieved.
Note:
Since linking attribute URIs are defined in terms of the XML
Schema datatype xsd:anyURI
, the same
internationalization benefits and white space cautions apply as
discussed in [XML Schema part 2].
Behavior of relative URIs in links is determined by the host language, although [XML Base] processing is strongly recommended.
Note:
The XForms Working Group is tracking with the HTML Working Group on a method of describing link structures.
The following attributes define a binding between a form control or an action and an instance data node defined by an XPath expression.
Binding expression interpreted as
XPath. This attribute has no meaning when a bind
attribute is present.
XForms Model selector. Specifies the ID
of an
XForms Model to be associated with this binding element. This
attribute has no meaning for the current binding element when a
bind
attribute is present. Rules for determining the
context XForms Model are located at 7.4
Evaluation Context.
Reference to a bind
element.
One of ref
or bind
is required. When
bind
is used, the node is determined by the referenced
bind
.
It is an exception (4.5.1 The
xforms-binding-exception Event) if the XForms Processor
encounters a model
IDREF
value that
refers to an ID
not on a model
element,
or a bind
IDREF
value that refers to an
ID
not on a bind
element.
First-node rule: When a Single-Node Binding attribute selects a node-set of size > 1, the first node in the node-set, based on document order, is used.
The following attributes define a binding between a form control or an action and a node-set defined by the XPath expression.
Binding expression interpreted as
XPath. This attribute has no meaning when a bind
attribute is present.
XForms Model selector. Specifies the ID
of an
XForms Model to be associated with this binding element. This
attribute has no meaning for the current binding element when a
bind
attribute is present. Rules for determining the
context XForms Model are located at 7.4
Evaluation Context.
Reference to a bind
element.
One of nodeset
or bind
is required.
When bind
is used, the node-set is determined by the
referenced bind
.
It is an exception (4.5.1 The
xforms-binding-exception Event) if the XForms Processor
encounters a model
IDREF value that refers to an id
not on a model
element, or a bind
IDREF
value that refers to an id
not on a bind
element.
This collection contains one attribute for each model item property, with an attribute name exactly matching the name of the model item property, as defined in 6.1 Model Item Property Definitions.
The XForms Core Module defines the major structural elements of XForms, intended for inclusion in a containing document. The elements and attributes included in this module are:
Element | Attributes | Minimal Content Model |
---|---|---|
model | Common, Events, functions (QNameList), schema (list of xsd:anyURI) | (instance|xsd:schema| submission|bind|Action)* |
instance | Common, Linking | (ANY) |
submission | Common, ref (binding-expression), bind (xsd:IDREF), action (xsd:anyURI), method ("post"|"get"|"put"|"form-data-post"|"urlencoded-post"|qname-but-not-ncname), version (xsd:NMTOKEN), indent (xsd:boolean), mediatype (xsd:string), encoding (xsd:string), omit-xml-declaration (xsd:boolean), standalone (xsd:boolean), cdata-section-elements (QNameList), replace ("all"|"instance"|"none"|qname-but-not-ncname), instance (xsd:IDREF), separator (';' | '&'), includenamespaceprefixes (xsd:NMTOKENS) | Action* |
bind | Common, Model Item Properties, nodeset (model-binding-expression) | (bind)* |
Elements defined in the XForms Actions module, when that module
is included, are also allowed in the content model of
model
and submission
, as shown above.
Within the containing document, these structural elements are typically not rendered.
The XForms Processor must ignore any foreign-namespaced attributes that are unrecognized, and must process unrecognized foreign-namespaced elements according to the 3.4 The XForms MustUnderstand Module rules.
Note that the presence of foreign namespaced elements is subject to the definition of the containing document profile.
This element represents a form definition and is used as a
container for elements that define the XForms Model. No restriction
is placed on how many model
elements may exist within
a containing document.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Attributes from XML Events are allowed on this element to facilitate creating observers. This element is not an XForms Action, and has no predefined behavior event-based behavior.
Special Attributes:
Optional space-separated list of XPath extension functions (represented by QNames) required by this XForms Model. Guidance on the use of this attribute is at 7.12 Extension Functions.
Optional list of xsd:anyURI
links to XML Schema
documents outside this model
element. The XForms
Processor must process all Schemas listed in this attribute. Within
each XForms Model, there is a limit of one Schema per namespace
declaration, including inline and linked Schemas.
Note:
The schema
list may include URI fragments referring
to elements located elsewhere in the containing document; e.g.
"#myschema"
.
This example shows a simple usage of model
, with
the XForms namespace defaulted:
<model id="Person" schema="MySchema.xsd"> <instance src="http://example.com/cgi-bin/get-instance" /> ... </model>
This optional element contains or references initial instance data.
Common Attributes: Common
Special Attributes:
Optional link to externally defined initial instance data. If the link traversal fails, it is treated as an exception (4.5.2 The xforms-link-exception Event).
If both an attribute and inline content are provided, the linked version takes precedence as described at 4.2.1 The xforms-model-construct Event.
If the initial instance data is given by a link, then the instance data is formed by creating an XPath data model of the linked resource.
If the initial instance data is given by inline content, then
instance data is obtained by first creating a detached copy of the
inline content (including namespaces inherited from the enveloping
ancestors), then creating an XPath data model over the detached
copy. The detached copy must consist of content that would be
well-formed XML if it existed in a separate document. Note that
this restricts the element content of instance
to a
single child element.
If creation of the detached copy of the inline instance data fails due to an XML error, then processing should halt with an xforms-link-exception. This could happen, for example, if the inline content had two element nodes, which would imply creating an XML document with two document elements.
Note:
In XForms 1.1, a new exception event will be issued.
Note:
All data relevant to the XPath data model must be preserved during processing and submission, including processing instructions, comment nodes and all whitespace.
Note:
XForms authors who need additional control over the
serialization of namespace nodes can use the
includenamespaceprefixes
attribute on the
submission
element.
This element represents declarative instructions on what to submit, and how. Details of submit processing are described at 11 Submit.
Common Attributes: Common
Special Attributes:
Optional reference to a bind
element. When present,
the binding reference on this attribute is used in preference to
any binding reference from the ref
attribute.
Optional selector binding expression enabling submission of a portion of the instance data. The selected node, and all descendants, are selected for submission. The default value is "/".
Required destination URI for submitting instance data. Behavior of relative URIs in links is determined by the host language, although [XML Base] processing is strongly recommended.
Required attribute specifying the protocol to be used to transmit the serialized instance data. There is no default value.
Optional attribute specifying the version
of XML to
be serialized.
Optional attribute specifying whether the serializer should add extra white space nodes for readability.
Optional attribute specifying the mediatype for XML instance
serialization. Authors should ensure that the type specified is
compatible with application/xml
.
Optional attribute specifying an encoding for serialization.
Optional attribute specifying whether to omit the XML declaration on the serialized instance data.
Optional attribute specifying whether to include a standalone declaration in the serialized XML.
Optional attribute specifying element names to be serialized with CDATAsections.
Optional attribute specifying how the information returned after submit should be applied. In the absence of this attribute, "all" is assumed.
Optional attribute specifying the instance to replace when the
replace
attribute value is "instance". When the
attribute is absent, then the default is the instance that contains
the submission data. An xforms-binding-exception (4.5.1 The xforms-binding-exception
Event) occurs if this attribute does not indicate an
instance in the same model as the submission.
Optional attribute specifying the separator character between name/value pairs in urlencoding. The default value is ';'.
Optional attribute providing control over namespace
serialization. If absent, all namespace nodes present in the
instance data are considered for serialization. If present,
specifies list of namespace prefixes to consider for serialization,
in addition to those visibly utilized. As in [Exc-C14N], the special value
#default
specifies the default namespace.
The following examples show how various options on element
submission
can affect serialization as
application/xml
. Given the following XForms
fragment:
<xforms:model xmlns:xforms="http://www.w3.org/2002/xforms" xmlns:my="http://ns.example.org/2003"> <xforms:instance> <qname xmlns="">my:sample</qname> </xforms:instance> <xforms:submission method="post" action="..."/> </xforms:model>
Note that the includenamespaceprefixes
attribute is
not present, which causes all namespace nodes to be serialized,
resulting in the following serialized instance data:
<qname xmlns:xforms="http://www.w3.org/2002/xforms" xmlns:my="http://ns.example.org/2003">my:sample</qname>
In particular, note that the XForms namespace has been
serialized. To prevent this example from including the unneeded
XForms namespace while maintaining the needed my
prefix, includenamespaceprefixes="my"
must be added to
the submission element. When this attribute is present, the author
takes responsibility to list all namespace prefixes not visibly
utilized by the submitted instance data.
The following attributes correspond (in spelling, processing,
and default values) to attributes on the output
element of [XSLT 1.0], with the exception
of using xsd:boolean
to replace
"yes"|"no"
:
version
indent
encoding
omit-xml-declaration
cdata-section-elements
Note:
The following XSLT attributes have no counterpart in XForms:
doctype-system
doctype-public
Elements defined in the XForms Actions module, when that module
is included, are also allowed in the content model of
submission
.
Element bind
selects a node-set selected from the
instance
data with a model binding expression in the
nodeset
attribute. Other attributes on element
bind
encode model item properties to be applied
to each node in the node-set. When bind
has an
attribute of type xsd:ID
, the bind
then
associates that identifier with the selected node-set.
Common Attributes: Common, Model Item Properties
Special Attributes:
A model binding expression that
selects the set of nodes on which this bind
operates,
as defined in 7.5.2
Model Binding Expressions.
When additional nodes are added through action
insert
, the newly added nodes are included in any
node-sets matched by binding expressions—see action
insert
in 9.3.5 The insert
Element.
See 7.4 Evaluation Context for details on how binding affects the evaluation context.
Certain elements, such as extension
or foreign
namespaced elements defined in a host language might be critical to the
operation of a particular form. To indicate this, the
MustUnderstand module defines a single attribute that can be used
on any element.
Element | Attributes | Minimal Content Model |
---|---|---|
ANY | xforms:mustUnderstand (xsd:boolean) | n/a |
It is a terminating error that must be reported to the user if
an element is marked mustUnderstand="true"
, and the
XForms Processor does not have an implementation available for
processing the element.
There are many different ways a host language might include XForms. One approach uses only well-formed processing, disregarding validation. Another case uses strict validation, for example XHTML 1.0, in which only predefined elements are allowed. Another common approach is to allow unregulated content in a few selected places. A host language that chooses this option can use the Extension module.
Element | Attributes | Minimal Content Model |
---|---|---|
extension | Common | ANY |
Optional element extension
is a container for
application-specific extension elements from any namespace other
than the XForms namespace. This specification does not define the
processing of this element.
Common Attributes: Common
For example, RDF metadata could be attached to an individual form control as follows:
<input ref="dataset/user/email" id="email-input"> <label>Enter your email address</label> <extension> <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="#email-input"> <my:addressBook>personal</my:addressBook> </rdf:Description> </rdf:RDF> </extension> </input>
This chapter defines the XForms Processing Model declaratively by enumerating the various states attained by an XForms Processor and the possible state transitions that exist in each of these states. The chapter enumerates the pre-conditions and post-conditions that must be satisfied in each of these states. XForms Processors may be implemented in any manner, so long as the end results are identical to that described in this chapter.
State transitions are in general initiated by sending events to parts of the XForms tree. The XForms Processing Model consists of events in the following categories:
Initialization
Interaction
Notification
Error Conditions
XForms processing is defined in terms of events, event handlers, and event responses. XForms uses the events system defined in [DOM2 Events][XML Events], with an event capture phase, arrival of the event at its Target, and finally the event bubbling phase.
Throughout this chapter, each reference to "form control" as a
target element is a shorthand for any of the following elements:
input
, secret
, textarea
,
output
, upload
, trigger
,
range
, submit
, select
,
select1
, or group
.
Event name | Cancelable? | Bubbles? | Target element |
---|---|---|---|
4.2 Initialization Events | |||
xforms-model-construct | No | Yes | model |
xforms-model-construct-done | No | Yes | model |
xforms-ready | No | Yes | model |
xforms-model-destruct | No | Yes | model |
4.3 Interaction Events | |||
xforms-previous | Yes | No | form control |
xforms-next | Yes | No | form control |
xforms-focus | Yes | No | form control |
xforms-help | Yes | Yes | form control |
xforms-hint | Yes | Yes | form control |
xforms-rebuild | Yes | Yes | model |
xforms-refresh | Yes | Yes | model |
xforms-revalidate | Yes | Yes | model |
xforms-recalculate | Yes | Yes | model |
xforms-reset | Yes | Yes | model |
xforms-submit | Yes | Yes | submission |
4.4 Notification Events | |||
DOMActivate | Yes | Yes | form control |
xforms-value-changed | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-select | No | Yes | item or
case |
xforms-deselect | No | Yes | item or
case |
xforms-scroll-first | No | Yes | repeat |
xforms-scroll-last | No | Yes | repeat |
xforms-insert | No | Yes | instance |
xforms-delete | No | Yes | instance |
xforms-valid | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-invalid | No | Yes | form control |
DOMFocusIn | No | Yes | form control |
DOMFocusOut | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-readonly | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-readwrite | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-required | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-optional | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-enabled | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-disabled | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-in-range | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-out-of-range | No | Yes | form control |
xforms-submit-done | No | Yes | submission |
xforms-submit-error | No | Yes | submission |
4.5 Error Indications | |||
xforms-binding-exception | No | Yes | any element that can contain a binding expression |
xforms-link-exception | No | Yes | model |
xforms-link-error | No | Yes | model |
xforms-compute-exception | No | Yes | model |
This section defines the various stages of the
initialization phase. The processor begins initialization
by dispatching an event xforms-model-construct
to each
XForms Model in the containing document. How the XForms
Processor itself is requested to initialize is implementation
dependent.
Dispatched to each XForms model by the XForms processor.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following:
All XML Schemas loaded. If an error occurs while attempting to access or process a remote document, processing halts with an exception (4.5.2 The xforms-link-exception Event).
If an external source for the initial instance data is given, an XPath data model [7 XPath Expressions in XForms] is constructed from it; otherwise if inline initial instance data is given, that is used instead. If the external initial instance data is not well-formed XML or cannot be retrieved, processing halts with an exception (4.5.2 The xforms-link-exception Event). If neither are given, the data model is not constructed in this phase, but during user interface construction (4.2.2 The xforms-model-construct-done Event).
If applicable, P3P initialized. [P3P 1.0]
Instance data is constructed. All strings inserted into the
instance data are subject to Unicode normalization. All model item
properties are initialized by processing all bind
elements in document order. For each bind
:
The attribute nodeset
attached to the bind is
evaluated, resulting in a set of nodes selected.
For each node in the node-set, model item properties are applied
according to the remaining attributes on bind
: the
string value of each attribute (with a name matching one of the
properties defined in 6.1
Model Item Property Definitions) is copied as the local
value of the model item property of the same name.
If the node already contains a model item property of the same name, XForms processing for this containing document halts with an exception (4.5.1 The xforms-binding-exception Event).
Perform an xforms-rebuild
,
xforms-recalculate
, and xforms-revalidate
in sequence, for this model
element. (The
xforms-refresh
is not performed since the user
interface has not yet been initialized).
After all XForms Models have been initialized, an
xforms-model-construct-done
event is dispatched to
each model
element.
Dispatched after the completion of
xforms-model-construct
processing.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event happens once, no matter how many XForms Models are present in the containing document, and results in the following, for each form control:
Processing can proceed in one of two different ways depending on
whether an instance
in a model
exists
when the first form control is processed.
If the instance
referenced on the form control
existed when the first form control was processed:
The binding expression is evaluated to ensure that it points to
a node that exists. If this is not the case then the form control
should behave in the same manner as if it had bound to a model item
with the relevant
model item property resolved to
false
.
If the instance
referenced on the form control did
not exist when the first form control for the same
instance
was processed:
For the first reference to an instance
a default
instance
is created by following the rules described
below.
A root instanceData
element is created.
An instance data element node will be created using the binding
expression from the user interface control as the
name
. If the name
is not a valid QName,
processing halts with an exception (4.5.1 The xforms-binding-exception
Event).
For the second and subsequent references to an
instance
which was automatically created the following
processing is performed:
If a matching instance data node is found, the user interface control will be connected to that element.
If a matching instance data node is not found, an instance data
node will be created using the binding expression from the user
interface control as the name
. If the
name
is not a valid QName, processing halts with an
exception (4.5.1 The
xforms-binding-exception Event).
After all form controls have been initialized, an
xforms-ready
event is dispatched to each
model
element.
Dispatched as part of xforms-model-construct-done
processing.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
Dispatched by the processor to advise of imminent shutdown of
the XForms Processor, which can occur from user action, or from the
load
XForms Action, or as a result of form
submission.
Target: model
Bubbles: No
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
Dispatched in response to: user request to navigate to the next or previous form control.
Target: form control
Bubbles: No
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
The default action for these events results in the following:
Navigation according to the default navigation order. For example,
on a keyboard interface, "tab" might generate an
xforms-next
event, while "shift+tab" might generate an
xforms-previous
event.
Navigation is determined on a containing document-wide basis.
The host language is responsible for defining overall navigation
order. The following describes a possible technique based on a
navindex
attribute, using individual form controls as
a navigation unit: The <group
>,
<repeat
>, and <switch
>
structures also serve as navigation units, but instead of providing
a single navigation point, they create a local navigation context
for child form controls (and possibly other substructures). The
navigation sequence is determined as follows:
Form controls that have a navindex
specified and
assign a positive value to it are navigated first.
Outermost form controls are navigated in increasing order of the
navindex
value. Values need not be sequential nor must
they begin with any particular value. Form controls that have
identical navindex
values are to be navigated in
document order.
Ancestor form controls (<group
>,
<repeat
>, and <switch
>)
establish a local navigation sequence. All form controls within a
local sequence are navigated, in increasing order of the
navindex
value, before any outside the local sequence
are navigated. Form controls that have identical
navindex
values are navigated in document order.
Those form controls that do not specify navindex
or
supply a value of "0" are navigated next. These form controls are
navigated in document order.
Those form controls that are disabled, hidden, or not
relevant
are assigned a relative order in the overall
sequence but do not participate as navigable controls.
The navigation sequence past the last form control (or before the first) is undefined. XForms Processors may cycle back to the first/last control, remove focus from the form, or other possibilities.
Dispatched in response to: set focus to a form control.
Target: form control
Bubbles: No
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
The default action for these events results in the following:
Focus is given to the target form control if the form control is able to accept focus. Setting focus to a repeating structure sets the focus to the repeat item represented by the repeat index.
Dispatched in response to: a user request for help or hint information.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
The default action for these events results in the following: If the form control has help/hint elements supplied, these are used to construct a message that is displayed to the user. Otherwise, user agents may provide default help or hint messages, but are not required to.
Dispatched in response to: a request to update all form controls associated with a particular XForms Model.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following:
All UI bindings should be reevaluated as necessary.
A node can be changed by confirmed user input to a form control, by xforms-recalculate (section 4.3.6) or by the setvalue (section 10.1.9) action. If the value of an instance data node was changed, then the node must be marked for dispatching the xforms-value-changed event.
If the xforms-value-changed event is marked for dispatching, then all of the appropriate model item property notification events must also be marked for dispatching (xforms-optional or xforms-required, xforms-readwrite or xforms-readonly, and xforms-enabled or xforms-disabled).
For each form control, each notification event that is marked for dispatching on the bound node must be dispatched (xforms-value-changed, xforms-valid, xforms-invalid, xforms-optional, xforms-required, xforms-readwrite, xforms-readonly, and xforms-enabled, xforms-disabled). The notification events xforms-out-of-range or xforms-in-range must also be dispatched as appropriate. This specification does not specify an ordering for the events.
The user interface reflects the state of the model, which means that all forms controls reflect for their corresponding bound instance data:
its current value
its validity
whether it is required
, readonly
or
relevant
.
Dispatched in response to: a request to revalidate a particular XForms Model.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
An instance node is valid if and only if the following conditions hold:
the constraint model item property is true
the node satisfies any applicable XML schema definitions (including those associated by the type model item property)
Note:
A node that satifies the above conditions is valid even if it is required but empty.
The default action for this event results in the following:
All instance data nodes in all instance
elements in
the model
are checked for validity according to
the above definition. If the validity of a node changes, then the
node is marked for dispatching the appropriate notification event
(xforms-valid or xforms-invalid) to bound form controls during
xforms-refresh as follows:
If the node changes from invalid to valid, then the node is marked for dispatching the xforms-valid event.
If the node changes from valid to invalid, then the node is marked for dispatching the xforms-invalid event.
Dispatched in response to: a request to recalculate all calculations associated with a particular XForms Model.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following:
The values of all instance data items match their associated 'calculate' constraints, if any. All model item properties that can contain computed expressions are resolved. In addition to contributing further node value changes that will cause xforms-value-changed notifications in xforms-refresh, the model item properties that change are marked to help xforms-revalidate and xforms-refresh to determine the notification events to dispatch.
If the required model item property changes, then either the xforms-required event must be marked for dispatch if required is true or the xforms-optional event must be marked for dispatch if required is false.
If the readonly model item property changes, then either the xforms-readonly event must be marked for dispatch if readonly is true or the xforms-readwrite event must be marked for dispatch if readonly is false.
If the relevant model item property changes, then either the xforms-enabled event must be marked for dispatch if relevant is true or the xforms-disabled event must be marked for dispatch if relevant is false.
An XPath expression is bound either to the value or to a model
item property (e.g., required
, relevant
)
of one or more instance nodes. The combination of an XPath
expression with a single instance node's value or model item
property is considered as a single computational unit, a
compute, for the purposes of recalculation.
When it is time to recalculate a model item
property, the XPath expression is evaluated. The
evaluation context is determined from the model binding expression
that applied the model item property, as defined for computed
expressions in 7.4 Evaluation
Context. The XPath expression may reference
or refer to another instance node, in which case the value
of the instance node is referenced. Each referenced instance
node has as dependents those computes which directly refer
to the instance node. References to the current node's value in
calculate
expressions are explicitly ignored, i.e., if
an expression associated with a compute refers to the instance node
associated with the compute, then the instance node does not take
itself as a dependent. A compute is computationally
dependent on an instance node (whose value may or may not be
computed) if there is a path of dependents leading from the
instance node through zero or more other instance nodes to the
compute. A compute is part of a circular dependency if it is
computationally dependent on itself.
Note:
Authors should not refer to the current node's value in
calculate
expressions because the effect is not
well-defined. Other model item properties, such as
required
or readonly
, however, are
well-defined in the presence of self-references.
When a recalculation event begins, there will be a list L of one or more instance nodes whose values have been changed, e.g., by user input being propagated to the instance.
An XForms Processor should not recalculate computes that are not computationally dependent on one or more of the elements in L.
An XForms Processor should perform only a single recalculation of each compute that is computationally dependent on one or more of the elements in L.
An XForms Processor must recalculate a compute C after recalculating all computes of instance nodes on which C is computationally dependent. (Equivalently, an XForms Processor must recalculate a compute C before recalculating any compute that is computationally dependent on the instance node associated with C.)
Finally, if a compute is part of a circular dependency and also computationally dependent on an element in L, then an XForms processor must report an exception (4.5.4 The xforms-compute-exception Event).
D Recalculation Sequence Algorithm describes one possible method for achieving the desired recalculation behavior.
Dispatched in response to: a request to rebuild the internal data structures that track computational dependencies within a particular XForms Model.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following:
The default action for this event is that the computational
dependency data structures are rebuilt, then the change list
L is set to contain references to all instance nodes that
have an associated computational expression such that a
full recalculate is performed the next time the
xforms-recalculate
event is dispatched to the
model.
Dispatched in response to: a user request to reset the model.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following:
The instance data is reset to the tree structure and values it
had immediately after having processed the
xforms-ready
event. Then, the events
xforms-rebuild
, xforms-recalculate
,
xforms-revalidate
and xforms-refresh
are
dispatched to the model
element in sequence.
See chapter 11 Submit.
Dispatched in response to: the "default action request" for a form control, for instance pressing a button or hitting enter.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
Dispatched in response to: a change to an instance data node bound to a form control.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched during 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event if the bound instance data node has been marked for dispatching this event due to a change.
Note:
For incremental processing, this specification does not define how often XForms Processors fire these events. Implementations are expected to optimize processing (for instance not flashing the entire screen for each character entered, etc.).
Note:
The change to the instance data associated with this event happens before the event is dispatched.
Dispatched in response to: an item in a select
,
select1
, or switch
becoming selected or
deselected.
Target: item
or itemset
or case
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
Dispatched in response to: a setindex action attempting to set
an index outside the range of a repeat
.
Target: repeat
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
Dispatched in response to: A event handler invoking an XForms
Action insert
or delete
, successfully
adding or deleting a repeat item..
Target: instance
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: Path expression used for insert/delete (xsd:string).
The default action for these events results in the following: None; notification event only.
Dispatched in response to: an instance data node either changing and being or becoming valid.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched during 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event if the bound instance data node has been marked for dispatching this event in 4.3.5 The xforms-revalidate Event.
Dispatched in response to: an instance data node either changing and being or becoming invalid.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched during 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event if the bound instance data node has been marked for dispatching this event in 4.3.5 The xforms-revalidate Event.
Dispatched in response to: a form control receiving focus.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
Dispatched in response to: a form control losing focus.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
Dispatched in response to: an instance data node either changing and being or becoming readonly.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched during 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event if the bound instance data node has been marked for dispatching this event in 4.3.6 The xforms-recalculate Event or 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event.
Dispatched in response to: an instance data node either changing and being or becoming read-write.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched during 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event if the bound instance data node has been marked for dispatching this event in 4.3.6 The xforms-recalculate Event or 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event.
Dispatched in response to: an instance data node either changing and being or becoming required.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched during 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event if the bound instance data node has been marked for dispatching this event in 4.3.6 The xforms-recalculate Event or 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event.
Dispatched in response to: an instance data node either changing and being or becoming optional.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched during 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event if the bound instance data node has been marked for dispatching this event in 4.3.6 The xforms-recalculate Event or 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event.
Dispatched in response to: an instance data node either changing and being or becoming enabled.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched during 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event if the bound instance data node has been marked for dispatching this event in 4.3.6 The xforms-recalculate Event or 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event.
Dispatched in response to: an instance data node either changing and being or becoming disabled.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched during 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event if the bound instance data node has been marked for dispatching this event in 4.3.6 The xforms-recalculate Event or 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event.
Dispatched in response to: the value of an instance data node has changed such that the value can now be represented by the form control.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched whenever the value of an instance data node that was not possible to represent given the constraints specified on a form control has changed such that the value can now be represented by the form control.
Dispatched in response to: the value of an instance data node has changed such that the value can not be represented by the form control.
Target: form control
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
This event is dispatched whenever the value of an instance data node can not be represented given the constraints specified on a form control.
Dispatched in response to: completion of submit processing, including processing any returned document.
Target: submission
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
Dispatched as an indication of: a failure of the submit process, as defined at 11 Submit
Target: submission
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: The submit method URI that failed (xsd:anyURI)
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
Error indications happen as a result of unusual conditions in the XForms Processor. Some of these are "fatal" errors, which halt processing, and bear the suffix "exception". Others are simply for notification, and bear the suffix "error". For all events in this section, it is permissible for the XForms Processor to perform some kind of default handling, for example logging error messages to a file.
Dispatched as an indication of: an illegal binding expression,
or a model
attribute that fails to point to the ID of
a model
element, or a bind
attribute that
fails to point to the ID of a bind
element, or a
submission
attribute that fails to point to the ID of
a submission
element, or an
instance
attribute on the submission
element that fails to point to an instance
element in
the same model
element as the
submission
..
Target: any element that can contain a binding expression
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: None
The default action for this event results in the following: Fatal error.
Dispatched as an indication of: a failure in link traversal of a linking attribute.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: The URI that failed to load (xsd:anyURI)
The default action for this event results in the following: Fatal error.
Dispatched as an indication of: a failure in link traversal of a linking attribute, in a situation not critical to form processing.
Target: model
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: No
Context Info: The URI that failed to load (xsd:anyURI)
The default action for this event results in the following: None; notification event only.
The previous sections describe processing associated with individual events. This section gives the overall sequence of related events that must occur in several common situations. In the following lists, events that may be fired more than once are prefixed with [n].
input
, secret
, textarea
,
range
, or upload
ControlsWhen the form control is interactively changed, and has the "incremental="true" setting, the event sequence described at 4.6.7 Sequence: Value Change may be initiated at implementation dependent intervals.
When the form control is interactively changed and does not have the "incremental=true" setting, no events are required to be dispatched, and thus no order is defined.
When focus changes from the form control and the value has changed, the event sequence is as described at 4.6.7 Sequence: Value Change.
select
or
select1
ControlsWhen a selection is interactively changed, and the form control has the "incremental="true" setting, the event sequence is described at 4.6.6 Sequence: Selection Without Value Change, which may be followed immediately by the sequence described at 4.6.7 Sequence: Value Change.
When a selection is interactively changed, and the form control does not have the "incremental="true" setting, the event sequence is described at 4.6.6 Sequence: Selection Without Value Change.
When focus changes from the form control and the value has changed, the event sequence is as described at 4.6.7 Sequence: Value Change.
trigger
ControlsActivating the form control causes the event sequence defined at 4.6.8 Sequence: Activating a Trigger.
submit
ControlsActivating the form control causes the event sequence defined at 4.6.8 Sequence: Activating a Trigger, followed immediately by the event sequence defined at 4.6.9 Sequence: Submission.
xforms-recalculate
xforms-revalidate
xforms-refresh performs reevaluation of UI binding expressions then dispatches these events according to value changes, model item property changes and validity changes:
[n] xforms-value-changed
[n] xforms-valid or xforms-invalid
[n] xforms-enabled or xforms-disabled
[n] xforms-optional or xforms-required
[n] xforms-readonly or xforms-readwrite
[n] xforms-out-of-range or xforms-in-range
Perform further deferred updates as necessary
This chapter defines the datatypes used in defining an XForms Model.
XForms supports all XML Schema datatypes except for xsd:duration
,
xsd:ENTITY
, xsd:ENTITIES
, and
xsd:NOTATION
. Concepts value space, lexical space and constraining facets are as specified in [XML Schema part 2]. Certain XML Schema
datatypes have been identified as part of a smaller XForms
conformance profile that is being developed separately, and are
marked with an asterisk *. XForms includes datatypes
derived by restriction and derived by list from
these base types. XForms Processors must treat the datatypes listed
in the chapter as in-scope without requiring the inclusion of an
XML Schema.
Built-in primitive types:
dateTime *
time *
date *
gYearMonth *
gYear *
gMonthDay *
gDay *
gMonth *
string *
boolean *
base64Binary *
hexBinary
float
decimal *
double
anyURI *
QName
Note:
The built-in datatype xsd:duration
is not
supported, except as an abstract datatype. Instead, either
xforms:dayTimeDuration
or
xforms:yearMonthDuration
should be used.
Built-in derived types:
normalizedString
token
language
Name
NCName
ID
IDREF
IDREFS
NMTOKEN
NMTOKENS
integer *
nonPositiveInteger *
negativeInteger *
long *
int *
short *
byte *
nonNegativeInteger *
unsignedLong *
unsignedInt *
unsignedShort *
unsignedByte *
positiveInteger *
The Schema for XForms derives the following types to facilitate
defining model
in XForms.
This datatype serves as a base for the
xforms:listItems
datatype. The value space for
listItem permits one or more characters valid for xsd:string,
except white space characters.
XForms includes form controls that produce simpleType list
content. This is facilitated by defining a
derived-by-list
datatype. The value space for
listItems is defined by list-derivation from listItem.
Note:
In most cases, it is better to use markup to distinguish items in a list. See 9.3.3 The itemset Element.
This chapter defines infoset contributions that can be bound to
instance data nodes with element bind
(see 3.3.4 The bind Element). The
combination of these contributions to an instance data
node is called a model item. Taken together, these
contributions are called model item properties, and are
defined in the following section. In contrast, the term Schema
constraint refers only to XML Schema constraints from the
facets of a given
datatype.
Model item properties can be distinguished along various axes.
Computed expressions vs. fixed properties:
Fixed properties are static values that the XForms Processor evaluates only once. Such properties consist of literals, and are not subject to XPath evaluation.
Computed expressions are XPath expressions that provide a value to the XForms Processor. Such values are recalculated at certain times as specified by the XForms Processing Model (see 4 Processing Model). These expressions encode dynamic properties, often constraints, such as the dependency among various data items. Computed expressions are not restricted to examining the value of the instance data node to which they apply. XPath expressions provide the means to traverse the instance data; more complex computations may be encoded as call-outs to external scripts.
Inheritance rules:
Some model item properties define inheritance rules, in which
case the XForms Processor needs to keep track of two separate
values: 1) the local value, which is applied from an
attribute of element bind
, and 2) the inherited
value, which is determined by combining the evaluated local
value with the evaluated values from ancestor nodes in the instance
data.
Note:
The sample recalculation algorithm defined in D Recalculation Sequence Algorithm is defined to operate only on the local values of a model item property. It assumes that an implementation propagates the combined values to a node's descendants.
Assigning local values:
Local values are assigned by processing all bind elements in an XForms Model in document order. It is an error to attempt to set a model item property twice on the same node. The details of this process are given at 4.2.1 The xforms-model-construct Event.
The following sections list the model item properties available as part of all model items. For each, the following information is provided:
Description
Computed Expression (yes or no)
Legal Values
Default Value
Inheritance Rules
Description: associates a Schema datatype.
Computed Expression: No.
Legal Values: Any xsd:QName
representing a datatype
definition.
Default Value: xsd:string
.
Inheritance Rules: does not inherit.
The effect of this model item property is the same as placing
attribute xsi:type
on the instance data. However, in
contrast to xsi:type
, type
can be added
to both elements and attributes.
<instance> <my:person-name> <my:first-name /> <my:last-name xsi:type="my:nonEmptyString" /> </my:person-name> </instance> <bind type="my:nonEmptyString" nodeset="/my:person-name/my:first-name" />
Here, we have illustrated two ways in which an XML Schema type can be associated with an element.
Description: describes whether the value is restricted from changing.
Computed Expression: Yes.
Legal Values: Any expression that is convertible to XPath
boolean
with boolean()
.
Default Value: false()
, unless a
calculate
property is specified, then
true()
.
Inheritance Rules: If any ancestor node evaluates to
true
, this value is treated as true
.
Otherwise, the local value is used.
Note:
This is the equivalent of taking the logical OR of the evaluated
readonly
property on the local and every ancestor
node.
When evaluating to true
, this model item property
indicates that the XForms Processor should not allow any changes to
the bound instance data node.
In addition to restricting value changes, the
readonly
model item property provides a hint to the
XForms user interface. Form controls bound to instance data with
the readonly
model item property should indicate that
entering or changing the value is not allowed. This specification
does not define any effect on visibility, focus, or navigation
order.
<instance> <my:person-name> <my:first-name>Roland</my:first-name> <my:last-name/> </my:person-name> </instance> <bind nodeset="/my:person-name/my:first-name" readonly="true()"/>
Here, we have associated a readonly
property with
an element.
Description: describes whether a value is required before the instance data is submitted.
Computed Expression: Yes.
Legal Values: Any expression that is convertible to XPath
boolean
with boolean()
.
Default Value: false()
.
Inheritance Rules: does not inherit.
A form may require certain values, and this requirement
may be dynamic. When evaluating to true
, this model
item property indicates that a non-empty instance data node is
required before a submission of instance data can occur. Non-empty
is defined as:
If the bound instance data node is an element, the element must
not have the xsi:nil
attribute set to
true
.
The value of the bound instance data node must be convertible to
an XPath string
with a length greater than zero.
Except as noted below, the required
model item
property does not provide a hint to the XForms user interface
regarding visibility, focus, or navigation order. XForms authors
are strongly encouraged to make sure that form controls that accept
required
data are visible. An XForms Processor may
provide an indication that a form control is required, and may
provide immediate feedback, including limiting navigation. Chapter
4 Processing Model contains details on
how the XForms Processor enforces required values.
<instance> <my:person-name> <my:first-name>Roland</my:first-name> <my:last-name /> </my:person-name> </instance> <bind nodeset="/my:person-name/my:last-name" required="true()"/>
Here, we have associated a required
property with
element my:last-name
to indicate that a value must be
supplied.
Note:
XML Schema has a similarly named concept with
use
="required|optional|prohibited"
. This
is different than the XForms Model item property, in two ways: 1)
use
applies only to attributes, while XForms
required
applies to any node. 2) use
is
concerned with whether the entire attribute must be specified
(without regard to value), while required
determines
whether a value is required of the node before submission.
Description: indicates whether the model item is currently
relevant. Instance data nodes with this property
evaluating to false
are not serialized for
submission.
Computed Expression: Yes.
Legal Values: Any expression that is convertible to XPath
boolean
with boolean()
.
Default Value: true()
.
Inheritance Rules: If any ancestor node evaluates to XPath
false
, this value is treated as false
.
Otherwise, the local value is used.
Note:
This is the equivalent of taking the logical AND of the
evaluated relevant
property on the local and every
ancestor node.
Many forms have data entry sections that depend on other conditions. For example, a form might ask whether the respondent owns a car. It is only appropriate to ask for further information about their car if they have indicated that they own one.
The relevant
model item property provides hints to
the XForms user interface regarding visibility, focus, and
navigation order. In general, when true
, associated
form controls should be made visible. When false
,
associated form controls (and any children) and group and
switch elements (including content) should be made
unavailable, removed from the navigation order, and not allowed
focus.
Note:
A form control, group or switch must express a single node binding in order to be associated with an instance node.
<instance> <my:order> <my:item> <my:amount /> <my:discount>100</my:discount> </my:item> </my:order> </instance> <bind nodeset="my:item/my:discount" readonly="true()" relevant="../my:amount > 1000"/>
Here, we have associated a relevant
property with
element my:discount
to indicate a discount is relevant
when the order amount is greater than 1000.
The following table shows the user interface interaction between
required
and relevant
.
required="true()" |
required="false()" |
|
relevant="true()" |
The form control (and any children) must be visible or available to the user. The XForms user interface may indicate that a value is required. | The form control (and any children) must be visible or available to the user. The XForms user interface may indicate that a value is optional. |
relevant="false()" |
The form control (and any children) must be hidden or unavailable to the user. Entering a value or obtaining focus should not be allowed. The XForms user interface may indicate that should the form control become relevant, a value would be required. | The form control (and any children) must be hidden or unavailable to the user. Entering a value or obtaining focus should not be allowed. |
Description: supplies an expression used to calculate the value of the associated instance data node.
Computed Expression: Yes.
Legal Values: Any XPath expression.
Default Value: none.
Inheritance Rules: does not inherit.
An XForms Model may include model items that are computed from other values. For example, the sum over line items for quantity times unit price, or the amount of tax to be paid on an order. Such computed value can be expressed as a computed expression using the values of other model items. Chapter 4 Processing Model contains details of when and how the calculation is performed.
<instance> <my:order> <my:item> <my:amount /> <my:discount /> </my:item> </my:order> </instance> <bind nodeset="my:item/my:discount" calculate="../my:amount * 0.1" relevant="../my:amount > 1000"/>
Here, we have associated a relevant
property with
element my:discount
to indicate a discount of 10% is
relevant when the order amount is greater than 1000.
Description: specifies a predicate that needs to be satisfied for the associated instance data node to be considered valid.
Computed Expression: Yes.
Legal Values: Any expression that is convertible to XPath
boolean
with boolean()
.
Default Value: true()
.
Inheritance Rules: does not inherit.
When evaluating to XPath false
, the associated
model item is not valid; the converse is not necessarily true.
Chapter 4 Processing Model contains
details of when and how the constraint is calculated as well as
when validation is performed.
<instance> <my:range> <my:from /> <my:to /> </my:range> </instance> <bind nodeset="my:to" constraint=". > ../my:from" />
Here, a constraint
property associated with element
my:to
indicates that its value must be greater than
that of element my:from
.
Note:
Specifying minimum and maximum occurrences for nodes in the
instance data can be achieved by using the count()
function within a constraint
property.
Description: Attaches a P3P data element to an instance data node, indicating the specific kind of data collected there.
Computed Expression: No.
Legal Values: xsd:string
.
Default Value: none
Inheritance Rules: does not inherit.
This model item property holds a description of the kind of data collected by the associated instance data node, based on the P3P datatype system [P3P 1.0]. This information may be used to enhance the form-fill experience, for example by supplying previously-known data.
<instance> <my:person-name> <my:first-name /> <my:last-name /> </my:person-name> </instance> <bind type="my:nonEmptyString" nodeset="my:first-name" p3ptype="user.name.given"/>
Here, we have attached both XML Schema and P3P type information
to element first-name
via element
bind
.
Chapter 5 Datatypes described
how XForms uses the XML Schema datatype system to constrain the
value space of
data values collected by an XForms Model. Such datatype constraints
can be provided via an XML Schema. Alternatively, this section
lists various mechanisms for attaching type constraints to instance
data. Attributes xsi:schemaLocation
and
xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation
are ignored for purposes
for locating a Schema.
The XForms Processing Model applies XML Schema facets as part of the validation process. At the simplest level, it is necessary to associate a set of facets (through an XML Schema datatype) with a model item. This has the effect of restricting the allowable values of the associated instance data node to valid representations of the lexical space of the datatype.
The set of facets associated with a model item must be determined by the following list, as if it were processed in the given order. When multiple datatype restrictions apply to the same model item, the combination of all given restrictions must apply. Note that it is possible to produce a combination of restrictions that is impossible to satisfy; authors are encouraged to avoid this practice.
An XML Schema associated with the instance data.
An XML Schema xsi:type
attribute in the instance
data.
An XForms type
constraint associated with the
instance data node using XForms binding.
If no type constraint is provided, the instance data node
defaults to type="xsd:string"
(default to string
rule).
The following declares a datatype based on
xsd:string
with an additional constraining facet.
<xsd:simpleType name="nonEmptyString"> <xsd:restriction base="xsd:string"> <xsd:minLength value="1"/> </xsd:restriction> </xsd:simpleType>
This new datatype would then be associated with one or more model items through one of the methods outlined here.
<my:first-name xsi:type="my:nonEmptyString"/>
This defines element first-name
to be of type
my:nonEmptyString
.
<instance> <my:first-name /> </instance> <bind type="my:nonEmptyString" nodeset="/my:first-name"/>
Here, we have attached type information to element
first-name
via element bind
. Thus the
XForms author can extend external schemas without having the
ability to change them.
XForms uses XPath to address instance data nodes in binding expressions, to express constraints, and to specify calculations. XPath expressions that are not syntactically valid, including attempted calls to undefined functions, result in an exception (4.5.4 The xforms-compute-exception Event), except for binding expressions, which produce a different exception (4.5.1 The xforms-binding-exception Event).
XPath datatypes are used only in binding expressions and
computed expressions. XForms uses
XPath datatypes boolean
, string
,
number
, and node-set
. A future version of
XForms is expected to use XPath 2.0, which includes support for XML
Schema datatypes.
For this version of the XForms specification, the feature string
for the [DOM2 Core]
DOMImplementation
interface hasFeature
method call is "org.w3c.xforms.dom"
and the version
string is "1.0"
.
For each model
element, the XForms Processor
maintains the state in an internal structure called instance data that
conforms to the XPath Data Model [XPath
1.0]. XForms Processors that implement DOM must provide DOM
access to this instance data via the interface defined below.
Note:
Instance data always has a single root element, and thus corresponds to a DOM Document.
The IDL for this interface follows:
#include "dom.idl" pragma prefix "w3c.org" module xforms { interface XFormsModelElement : dom::Element { dom::Document getInstanceDocument(in dom::DOMString instanceID) raises(dom::DOMException); void rebuild(); void recalculate(); void revalidate(); void refresh(); }; };
This method returns a DOM Document that corresponds to the
instance data associated with the instance
element
containing an ID
matching the instance-id
parameter. If there is no matching instance data, a
DOMException
is thrown.
This method signals the XForms Processor to rebuild any internal data structures used to track computational dependencies within this XForms Model. This method takes no parameters and raises no exceptions.
This method signals the XForms Processor to perform a full recalculation of this XForms Model. This method takes no parameters and raises no exceptions.
Note:
Script invocation of recalculate()
is not
necessarily equivalent to performing the recalculate action
handler. Though the script is assumed to have modified instance
data prior to invoking recalculate()
, the DOM
mutations are not cached. Thus, a full recalculation is
necessary to ensure the proper changes are effected throughout the
XForms Model.
Within XForms, XPath expressions reference abstract instance data , instead of a concrete XML document. This reference is called a binding expression in this specification. Every XPath expression requires an evaluation context. The following rules are used in determining evaluation context when evaluating XPath expressions as part of XForms:
The context node for outermost binding elements is the top-level
element node, or the single node returned by /*
. A
binding element is any element that is explicitly allowed to
have a binding expression attribute. A binding element is
"outermost" when the node-set returned by the XPath
expression ancestor::*
includes no binding element
nodes.
The context node for non-outermost binding elements is the first
node of the binding expression of the immediately enclosing
element. An element is "immediately enclosing" when it is
the first binding element node in the node-set returned by the
XPath expression ancestor::*
. This is also referred to
as "scoped resolution".
The context node always resides within the context model, which is determined choosing the first item that applies from this list:
If a model
attribute is present on the binding
element, the attribute determines the context model.
If the binding element has an immediately enclosing binding element, the context model of the immediately enclosing binding element is used.
The first model in document order is used.
The context node for computed expressions (occurring on element bind) is the node currently being processed.
For Single-Node binding expressions, the context size and position are 1. For Nodeset binding expressions, the context size is the size of the node-set, and the context position is the document order position of the node currently being processed within the node-set.
No variable bindings are in place.
The available function library is defined below, plus any functions supplied by the implementation. Extension functions required for operation of the form should be declared, as described at 7.12 Extension Functions.
Any namespace declarations in scope for the attribute that defines the expression are applied to the expression.
<group ref="level2/level3"> <select1 ref="@attr" ... > <label>...</label> </select1> </group>
In this example, the group
has a binding expression
of level2/level3
. According to the rules above, this
outermost element node would have a context node of
/level1
, which is the top-level element node of the
instance data. The select1
form control then inherits
a context node from the parent group. Matching instance data,
represented as serialized XML, follows:
<level1> <level2> <level3 attr="xyz"/> </level2> </level1>
A binding expression is an XPath
PathExpr used in binding a model item property to one or more
instance nodes, or to bind a form control to instance data, or to
specify the node or node set for operation by an action. By
default, all binding expressions refer to the first instance within
the context model. This behavior can be changed with the
instance()
function.
Not every possible XPath expression is acceptable as a binding expression. In particular, there are restrictions on model binding expressions that create dynamic dependencies, which are defined as follows:
An XPath predicate (in square brackets) is a possibly implicit boolean test. A dynamic dependency exists on any predicate unless all terms in the test are "fixed", where fixed means either a constant, or a value that will not change between operations explicitly defined as rebuilding computational dependencies.
Note:
For purposes of determining dynamic dependencies, the following
subexpressions are considered fixed: position()
,
last()
, count()
, and
property()
. This is because the specification mandates
a dependency rebuild after any event that could change the values
returned by these functions.
Another dynamic dependency is any use of the id()
function, unless both the parameter to the function and the
matching attribute of type xsd:ID
are fixed. In the
same way, the instance()
function is dynamic unless
the parameter to the function is fixed.
XPath variables that change in value from one recalculate to the next would also create dynamic dependencies (though XForms 1.0 defines an empty variable context for all XPath expressions).
Authors that define extension functions are encouraged to follow these rules.
A model binding expression is a
kind of binding expression that can be used to declare model item
properties, and is used in attributes of the bind
element.
Dynamic dependencies in model binding expressions will generally require manual rebuilding of dependencies.
Binding references can be used to bind form controls to the
underlying instance data as described here. Different attribute
names, ref
and nodeset
distinguish
between a single node and a node-set respectively. See 3.2.3 Single-Node Binding
Attributes and 3.2.4
Node-Set Binding Attributes.
Dynamic dependences are allowed in UI binding expressions based on the conformance profile.
The XForms binding mechanism allows other XML vocabularies to
bind user interface controls to an XForms Model using any of the
techniques shown here. As an example, XForms binding attribute
bind
might be used within XHTML 1.x user interface
controls as shown below. See 3.2.3 Single-Node Binding
Attributes and 3.2.4
Node-Set Binding Attributes.
<html:input type="text" name="..." xforms:bind="fn"/>
Consider the following document with the one-and-only XForms model:
<xforms:model id="orders"> <xforms:instance xmlns=""> <orderForm> <shipTo> <firstName>John</firstName> </shipTo> </orderForm> </xforms:instance> <xforms:bind nodeset="/orderForm/shipTo/firstName" id="fn" /> </xforms:model>
The following examples show three ways of binding user interface
control xforms:input
to instance element
firstName
declared in the model shown above.
ref
<xforms:input ref="/orderForm/shipTo/firstName">...
bind
<xforms:input bind="fn">...
<xforms:input model="orders" ref="/orderForm/shipTo/firstName">...
The XForms Core Function Library includes the entire [XPath 1.0] Core Function Library, including operations on node-sets, strings, numbers, and booleans.
These following sections define additional required functions for use within XForms.
boolean boolean-from-string(string)
Function boolean-from-string
returns
true
if the required parameter string
is
"true" or "1", or false
if parameter
string
is "false", or "0". This is useful when
referencing a Schema xsd:boolean
datatype in an XPath
expression. If the parameter string matches none of the above
strings, according to a case-insensitive comparison, the
return value is false
.
number avg(node-set)
Function avg
returns the arithmetic average of the
result of converting the string-values of each node in the argument
node-set to a number. The sum is computed with sum()
,
and divided with div
by the value computed with
count()
. If the parameter is an empty node-set,
or if any of the nodes evaluate to NaN
, the
return value is NaN
.
number min(node-set)
Function min
returns the minimum value of the
result of converting the string-values of each node in argument
node-set
to a number. "Minimum" is determined with the
<
operator. If the parameter is an empty node-set,
or if any of the nodes evaluate to NaN
, the return
value is NaN
.
number max(node-set)
Function max
returns the maximum value of the
result of converting the string-values of each node in argument
node-set
to a number. "Maximum" is determined with the
<
operator. If the parameter is an empty node-set,
or if any of the nodes evaluate to NaN
, the return
value is NaN
.
number count-non-empty(node-set)
Function count-non-empty
returns the number of
non-empty nodes in argument node-set
. A node is
considered non-empty if it is convertible into a string with a
greater-than zero length.
number index(string)
Function index
takes a string argument that is the
IDREF
of a repeat
and returns the current
1-based position of the repeat index for the identified
repeat
—see 9.3.1 The
repeat Element for details on repeat
and its
associated repeat index. If the specified argument does not
identify a repeat
, the function returns
NaN
.
<xforms:trigger> <xforms:label>Add to Shopping Cart</xforms:label> <xforms:insert ev:event="DOMActivate" position="after" nodeset="items/item" at="index('cartUI')"/> </xforms:trigger>
The
property() Function
string property(string)
Function property
returns the XForms property named
by the string parameter.
The following properties are available for reading (but not modification).
version
is defined as the string "1.0
"
for XForms 1.0.
conformance-level
strings are defined in 12 Conformance.
<xforms:instance> ... <xforms:bind nodeset="message" calculate="concat( 'created with XForms ', property('version'))"/> ... </xforms:instance>
Note:
The following XML Schema datatypes do not have specific
functions for manipulation within XForms expressions:
xsd:time
, xsd:gYearMonth
,
xsd:gYear
, xsd:gMonthDay
,
xsd:gDay
, xsd:gMonth
. Extension functions
(7.12 Extension Functions) may
be used to perform needed operations on these datatypes.
string now()
The now
function returns the current system date
and time as a string value in the canonical XML Schema
xsd:dateTime
format. If time zone information is
available, it is included (normalized to UTC). If no time zone
information is available, an implementation default is used.
Note:
Attaching a calculation of "now()
" to an instance
data node would not result in a stream of continuous recalculations
of the XForms Model.
number days-from-date(string)
This function returns a whole number of days, according to the following rules:
If the string parameter represents a legal lexical
xsd:date
or xsd:dateTime
, the return
value is equal to the number of days difference between the
specified date or dateTime (normalized to UTC) and
1970-01-01
. Hour, minute, and second components are
ignored after normalization. Any other input parameter causes a
return value of NaN
.
Examples:
days-from-date("2002-01-01")
returns11688
days-from-date("1969-12-31")
returns-1
number seconds-from-dateTime(string)
This function returns a possibly fractional number of seconds, according to the following rules:
If the string parameter represents a legal lexical
xsd:dateTime
, the return value is equal to the number
of seconds difference between the specified dateTime
(normalized to UTC) and
1970-01-01T00:00:00Z
. If no time zone is specified,
UTC is used. Any other input string parameter causes a
return value of NaN
.
number seconds(string)
This function returns a possibly fractional number of seconds, according to the following rules:
If the string parameter represents a legal lexical
xsd:duration
, the return value is equal to the number
specified in the seconds component plus 60 * the number specified
in the minutes component, plus 60 * 60 * the number specified in
the hours component, plus 60 * 60 * 24 * the number specified in
the days component. The sign of the result will match the sign of
the duration. Year and month components, if present, are ignored.
Any other input parameter causes a return value of
NaN
.
Examples:
seconds("P1Y2M")
returns0
seconds("P3DT10H30M1.5S")
returns297001.5
seconds("3")
returnsNaN
Note:
Even though this function is defined based on a lexical
xsd:duration
, it is intended for use only with
derived-from-xsd:duration
datatypes, specifically
xforms:dayTimeDuration
.
number months(string)
This function returns a whole number of months, according to the following rules:
If the string parameter represents a legal lexical
xsd:duration
, the return value is equal to the number
specified in the months component plus 12 * the number specified in
the years component. The sign of the result will match the sign of
the duration. Day, hour, minute, and second components, if present,
are ignored. Any other input parameter causes a return value of
NaN
.
Examples:
months("P1Y2M")
returns14
months("-P19M")
returns-19
Note:
Even though this function is defined based on a lexical
xsd:duration
, it is intended for use only with
derived-from-xsd:duration
datatypes, specifically
xforms:yearMonthDuration
.
node-set instance(string)
An XForms Model can contain more that one instance. This function allows access to instance data, within the same XForms Model, but outside the instance data containing the context node.
The argument is converted to a string as if by a call to the
string
function. This string is treated as an IDREF,
which is matched against instance
elements in the
containing document. If a match is located, and the matching
instance data is associated with the same XForms Model as the
current context node, this function returns a node-set containing
just the root element node (also called the document element node)
of the referenced instance data. In all other cases, an empty
node-set is returned.
Example:
For instance data corresponding to this XML:
<xforms:instance xmlns="" id="orderform"> <orderForm> <shipTo> <firstName>John</firstName> </shipTo> </orderForm> </xforms:instance>
The following expression selects the firstName
node. Note that the instance
function returns an
element node, effectively replacing the leftmost location step from
the path:
ref="instance('orderform')/shipTo/firstName"
XForms documents may use additional XPath extension functions
beyond those described here. A number of useful community
extensions are defined at [EXSLT]. The
names of any such extension functions must be declared in attribute
functions
on element model
. Such
declarations are used by the XForms Processor to check against
available extension functions. XForms Processors perform this check
at the time the document is loaded, and stop processing by
signaling an exception (4.5.4
The xforms-compute-exception Event) if the XForms document
declares an extension function for which the processor does not
have an implementation.
Note:
Explicitly declaring extension functions enables XForms Processors to detect the use of unimplemented extension functions at document load-time, rather than throwing a fatal error during user interaction. Failure by authors to declare extension functions will result in an XForms Processor potentially halting processing during user interaction with a fatal error.
Form controls are declared using markup elements, and their behavior refined via markup attributes.
Element | Attributes | Minimal Content Model |
---|---|---|
input | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding, inputmode (xsd:string), incremental (xsd:boolean) | label, (UI Common)* |
secret | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding, inputmode (xsd:string), incremental (xsd:boolean) | label, (UI Common)* |
textarea | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding, inputmode (xsd:string), incremental (xsd:boolean) | label, (UI Common)* |
output | Common, Single Node Binding (optional), appearance ("full"|"compact"|"minimal"|xforms:QNameButNotNCNAME), value (XPathExpression) | label? |
upload | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding, mediatype (xsd:string), incremental (xsd:boolean) | label, filename?, mediatype?, (UI Common)* |
range | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding, start (xsd:string), end (xsd:string), step (xsd:string), incremental (xsd:boolean) | label, (UI Common)* |
trigger | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding (optional) | label, (UI Common)* |
submit | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding (optional), submission (xsd:IDREF) | label, (UI Common)* |
select | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding, selection ("open" | "closed"), incremental (xsd:boolean) | label, (List UI Common)+, (UI Common)* |
select1 | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding, selection ("open" | "closed"), incremental (xsd:boolean) | label, (List UI Common)+, (UI Common)* |
choices | Common | label?, (List UI Common)+ |
item | Common | label, value, (UI Common)* |
filename | Common, Single Node Binding | EMPTY |
mediatype | Common, Single Node Binding | EMPTY |
value | Common, Single Node Binding (optional) | (PCDATA|ANY)* |
label | Common, Single Node Binding (optional), Linking | (PCDATA|(UI Inline))* |
help | Common, Single Node Binding (optional), Linking | (PCDATA|(UI Inline))* |
hint | Common, Single Node Binding (optional), Linking | (PCDATA|(UI Inline))* |
alert | Common, Single Node Binding (optional), Linking | (PCDATA|(UI Inline))* |
See also: 9.3.3 The itemset Element.
Note:
Unless bound to form controls, instance data nodes are not
presented to the user; consequently, there is no need for a form
control corresponding to HTML input type="hidden"
.
The following attributes are common to many user-interface
related XForms elements, here called the UI Common
attribute group.
Element | Attributes |
---|---|
(various) | appearance ("full"|"compact"|"minimal"|QName-but-not-NCName) |
Optional attribute to define an appearance hint. If absent, the user agent may freely choose any suitable rendering.
Note:
A host language is expected to add attributes such as
xml:lang
as well as an attribute, named
class
, that holds a list of strings that can be
matched by CSS class selectors.
Further, a host language must provide a way to indicate overall
navigation order among form controls and other elements included in
the host language, as well as keyboard or direct access navigation
to specific elements. One such proposal is to uses a pair of
attributes named navindex
and accesskey
,
defined as follows:
Optional attribute is a non-negative integer in the range of 0-32767 used to define the navigation sequence. This gives the author control over the sequence in which form controls are traversed. The default navigation order is specified in the chapter 4 Processing Model.
Optional attribute defines a shortcut for moving the input focus directly to a particular form control. The value of this is a single character which when pressed together with a platform specific modifier key (e.g., the alt key) results in the focus being set to this form control.
The user agent must provide a means of identifying the accesskeys that can be used in a presentation. This may be accomplished in different ways by different implementations, for example through direct interaction with the application or via the user's guide. The accesskey requested by the author might not be made available by the player (for example it may not exist on the device used, or it may be used by the player itself). Therefore the user agent should make the specified key available, but may map the accesskey to a different interaction behavior.
Additionally, this module defines the following content sets:
Content Set | Minimal Content Model |
---|---|
UI Common | (help|hint|alert|Action)* |
List UI Common | (choices|item|itemset)+ |
Form Controls | (input|secret|textarea|output|upload|range|trigger|submit|select|select1)* |
UI Inline | (output)* |
As shown above, the XML Events module adds the Actions content set into the UI Common content set. A host language should add inline markup to the Inline content set. When the XForms Extension module is present, it too should be included in the UI Common content set.
XForms user interface controls are bound to the underlying instance data using binding attributes as defined in the chapter 6 Model Item Properties.
Form controls enable accessibility by taking a uniform approach to such features as labels, help text, navigation, and keyboard shortcuts. Internationalization issues are addressed by following the same design principles as in XHTML. All form controls are suitable for styling as aural or visual media.
Form controls encapsulate high-level semantics without
sacrificing the ability to deliver real implementations. For
instance, the form control select
enables the user to
select items from a set. These form controls distinguish
the functional aspects of the underlying control from the
presentational and behavioral aspects. This separation enables the
expression of the intent underlying a particular form
control—see [AUI97] for a definition of such
high-level user interaction primitives.
Form controls when rendered display the underlying data values to which they are bound. While the data presented to the user through a form control must directly correspond to the bound instance data, the display representation is not required to match the lexical value. For example, user agents should apply appropriate conventions to the display of dates, times, durations and numeric values including separator characters.
All form controls must meet the following implementation requirements:
Form controls that write simpleContent to instance data must do so exactly as defined by the XForms Action 10.1.9 The setvalue Element
All form controls that read simpleContent instance data must do so as follows:
Element nodes: if text child nodes are present, returns the string-value of the first text child node. Otherwise, returns "" (the empty string)
Attribute nodes: returns the string-value of the node.
Text nodes: returns the string-value of the node.
Namespace, processing instruction, comment, and the XPath root node: behavior is undefined.
Form controls must distinguish rendering between valid and invalid states. Control of this behavior should be made available to stylesheets.
Form controls must indicate when the bound instance data contains a value the form control is not capable of rendering. Control of this behavior should be made available to stylesheets.
Form controls must render upon request an explanation of the current state of a form control, including validity and associated model item properties. Control of this behavior should be made available to stylesheets.
Form controls must provide a default explanation for the above when no user-specified explanation is available.
Sections in this chapter define the various form controls by specifying the following:
Description
Common Attributes
Special Attributes
Examples
Data Binding Restrictions
Implementation Requirements
Description: This form control enables free-form data entry.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node UI Binding
Special Attributes:
This form control accepts an input mode hint. E Input Modes.
when true
, this form control will generate
additional xforms-value-changed
events. The default
value for this attribute is false
.
Example:
<input ref="order/shipTo/street" class="streetAddress"> <label>Street</label> <hint>Please enter the number and street name</hint> </input>
In the above, the class
attribute can be used by a
style sheet to specify the display size of the form control. Note
that the constraints on how much text can be input are obtained
from the underlying XForms Model definition and not from these
display properties.
A graphical browser might render the above example as follows:
Data Binding Restrictions: Binds to any simpleContent (except
xsd:base64Binary
, xsd:hexBinary
or any
datatype derived from these).
Implementation Requirements: Must allow entry of a lexical value
for the bound datatype. Implementations should provide a convenient
means for entry of datatypes and take into account localization and
internationalization issues such as representation of numbers. For
example, an input
bound to an instance data node of
type xsd:date
might provide a calendar control to
enter dates; similarly, an input control bound to of type
boolean
might be rendered as a checkbox.
<input ref="order/shipDate"> <label>Ship By</label> <hint>Please specify the ship date for this order.</hint> </input>
A graphical browser might render the above example as follows:
The user can type a date into the text edit box, or press the button to open a calendar:
Description: This form control is used to provide the user with the ability to supply information to the system in a manner that makes it difficult for someone, other than the user, who may be observing the process to discern the value that is being supplied. A common use is for password entry.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding
Special Attributes:
This form control accepts an input mode hint. E Input Modes.
when true
, this form control will generate
additional xforms-value-changed
events. The default
value for this attribute is false
.
Example:
<secret ref="/login/password"> <label>Password</label> <hint>The password you enter will not be displayed.</hint> </secret>
A graphical browser might render this form control as follows:
Data Binding Restrictions: Identical to input
.
Implementation Requirements: Implementations, including accessibility aids, must obscure the value being entered into this form control. One possible approach would be to render a "*" or similar character instead of the actual characters entered. Note that this provides only a casual level of security; truly sensitive information will require additional security measures outside the scope of XForms.
Description: This form control enables free-form data entry and is intended for use in entering multiline content, e.g., the body of an email message.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding
Special Attributes:
This form control accepts an input mode hint. E Input Modes.
when true
, this form control will generate
additional xforms-value-changed
events. The default
value for this attribute is false
.
Example:
<textarea ref="message/body" class="messageBody"> <label>Message Body</label> <hint>Enter the text of your message here</hint> </textarea>
In the above, the class
attribute can be used by a
style sheet to specify the display size of the form control. Note
that the constraints on how much text can be input are obtained
from the underlying XForms Model definition and not from these
display properties.
A graphical browser might render the above example as follows:
Data Binding Restrictions: Binds to xsd:string
or
any derived simpleContent.
Implementation Requirements: Must allow entry of a lexical value for the bound datatype, including multiple lines of text.
Description: This form control renders a value from the instance
data, but provides no means for entering or changing data. It is
used to display values from the instance, and is treated as
display:inline
for purposes of layout. Element
output
can be used to display the value at a
particular location in the instance by using a binding expression;
it can also be used to display the result of evaluating an XPath
expression by specifying the XPath expression to be evaluated via
attribute value
instead of ref
. Note that
attributes ref
and value
on element
output
are mutually exclusive.
Common Attributes: Common, Single Node Binding (optional)
Special Attributes:
This form control does not use the UI Common attribute group, but nevertheless still contains an appearance attribute, as defined above.
An XPath expression to be evaluated. The string result of the evaluation is rendered by the form control. If binding attributes are present to select a node, this attribute has no effect. The evaluation context is the same as would be applied to the evaluation of the single node binding. This XPath expression is re-evaluated whenever there is a change in any node to which the expression refers.
Example:
I charged you - <output ref="order/totalPrice"/> - and here is why:
A graphical browser might render an output form control as follows:
Data Binding Restrictions: Binds to any simpleContent.
Implementation Requirements: Must allow display of a lexical value for the bound datatype. Implementations should provide a convenient means for display of datatypes and take into account localization and internationalization issues such as representation of numbers.
Description: This form control enables the common feature found on Web sites to upload a file from the local file system, as well as accepting input from various devices including microphones, pens, and digital cameras.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding
Special Attributes:
Space-separated list of suggested media types, used by the XForms Processor to determine the possible sources of data to upload.
When true
, this form control will generate
additional xforms-value-changed
events. The default
for this form control is false
.
Example:
<upload ref="mail/attachment" mediatype="image/*"> <label>Select image:</label> <filename ref="@filename" /> <mediatype ref="@mediatype" /> </upload>
A graphical browser might render this form control as follows:
Implementation Requirements:
On activation, if child element filename
is present
and a filename is available, upload
places the
filename of the data to upload in the instance at the node
indicated by the binding attributes on child element
filename
.
On activation, if child element mediatype
is
present and a mediatype is available, upload
places
the mediatype of the data to upload in the instance at the node
indicated by the binding attributes on child element
mediatype
.
Data Binding Restrictions: This form control can only be bound
to datatypes xsd:anyURI
, xsd:base64Binary
or xsd:hexBinary
, or types derived by restriction from
these.
Implementation Requirements: For base64Binary or hexBinary data binding:
When bound to an instance data node of type
xsd:base64binary
, xsd:hexBinary
, or a
type derived by restriction thereof, on activation
upload
places the binary content in the content of the
node with the indicated encoding.
Implementation Requirements: For anyURI data binding:
When bound to an instance data node of type
xsd:anyURI
(or a type derived by restriction thereof),
on activation upload
places a URI in the content of
the node.
For security reasons, the XForms Processor must not dereference the URI bound to this form control without explicit user permission.
Note:
Implementors note that upload
must associate the
binary content, mediatype, and filename with that URI for 11.4 Serialization as
multipart/related and 11.5 Serialization as
multipart/form-data serialization.
Implementations with a file system should support file
upload—selecting a specific file. The types of files
presented by default should reflect the mediatype specified by
attribute mediatype
, for example defaulting to only
audio file types in the file dialog when the mediatype is
"audio/*".
Implementation Requirements: For all data bindings:
Implementations with specific pen/digitizer hardware should (and implementations with other pointing devices may) support scribble—allowing in-place creation of pen-based data.
Implementations with specific audio recording capabilities should support record audio—in-place recording of an audio clip.
Implementations with a digital camera, scanner interface or screen capture should support acquire image—in-place upload of images from an attached device.
Implementations with video recording capability should provide a record video option.
Implementations with 3d capabilities should provide a 3d interface option.
Implementations may provide proprietary implementations (for
example, a mediatype of text/rtf
could invoke an edit
window with a proprietary word processing application)
Implementations are encouraged to support other input devices not mentioned here.
Implementations which cannot support upload for the given mediatype must make this apparent to the user.
See the child elements filename
8.3.1 The filename Element
and mediatype
8.3.2 The mediatype
Element.
Description: This form control allows selection from a sequential range of values.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding
Special Attributes:
Optional hint for the lexical starting bound for the range—a legal value for the underlying data. If provided, this value is used to further refine the constraints specified by the underlying model.
Optional hint for the ending bound for the range—a legal value for the underlying data. If provided, this value is used to further refine the constraints specified by the underlying model.
Optional value to use for incrementing or decrementing the value. Must be of a type capable of expressing the difference between two legal values of the underlying data.
When true
, this form control will generate
additional xforms-value-changed
events. The default
for this form control is false
.
Example:
<range ref="/stats/balance" start="-2.0" end="2.0" step="0.5"> <label>Balance</label> </range>
A graphical browser might render this as follows:
Data Binding Restrictions: Binds only the following list of
datatypes, or datatypes derived by restriction from those in the
list: xsd:duration
, xsd:date
,
xsd:time
, xsd:dateTime
,
xsd:gYearMonth
, xsd:gYear
,
xsd:gMonthDay
, xsd:gDay
,
xsd:gMonth
, xsd:float
,
xsd:decimal
, xsd:double
.
Implementation Requirements: Must allow input of a value corresponding to the bound datatype. Implementations should inform the user of the upper and lower bounds, as well as the step size, if any. If the instance data value is outside the upper or lower bounds, this form control must indicate an out-of-range condition. In graphical environments, this form control may be rendered as a "slider" or "rotary control".
Notice that the attributes of this element encapsulate sufficient metadata that in conjunction with the type information available from the XForms Model proves sufficient to produce meaningful prompts when using modalities such as speech, e.g., when using an accessibility aid. Thus, in the example below, an aural user agent might speak a prompt of the form Please pick a date in the range January 1, 2001 through December 31, 2001.
In the event of overlapping restrictions between the underlying
datatype and the start
and end
hints, the
most restrictive range should be used.
Example:
<range ref="/order/shipDate" start="2001-01-01" end="2001-12-31"> <label>Ship Date</label> </range>
Description: This form control is similar to the HTML element
button
and allows for user-triggered actions. This
form control may also be used to construct other custom form
controls.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding (optional)
Example:
<trigger> <label>Click here</label> </trigger>
Data Binding Restrictions: Binds to any node. This form control does not directly interact with form data, but is affected by model item properties of the bound node, thus binding attributes are not required.
Implementation Requirements: The user agent must provide a means
to generate an DOMActivate
event on the form control.
Graphical implementations might render this form control as a
push-button with the label on the button face. Style sheets can be
used to style this form control as an image, hyperlink, or other
presentation.
Description: This form control initiates submission of all or part of the instance data to which it is bound.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding (optional)
Special Attributes:
Required reference to element submission
.
Example:
<submit submission="timecard"> <label>Submit Timecard</label> </submit>
Data Binding Restrictions: Binds to any node. This form control does not directly interact with form data, but is affected by model item properties of the bound node, thus binding attributes are not required.
Implementation Requirements: Upon receiving event
DOMActivate
, this form control dispatches event
xforms-submit
to the submission
element
specified by required attribute submission
. Upon
activation, this control must become unavailable for further
activations until the submit process concludes with either an
xforms-submit-done
or xforms-submit-error
event.
Description: This form control allows the user to make multiple selections from a set of choices.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding
Special Attributes:
Optional attribute determining whether free entry is allowed in the list. Default is "closed".
When true
, this form control will generate
additional xforms-value-changed
events. The default
for this form control is true
.
Example:
<select ref="my:flavors"> <label>Flavors</label> <choices> <item> <label>Vanilla</label> <value>v</value> </item> <item> <label>Strawberry</label> <value>s</value> </item> <item> <label>Chocolate</label> <value>c</value> </item> </choices> </select>
In the above example, more than one flavor can be selected.
A graphical browser might render form control
select
as any of the following:
appearance="full" |
appearance="compact" |
appearance="minimal" |
---|---|---|
Typically, a style sheet would be used to determine the exact
appearance of form controls, though a means is provided to suggest
an appearance through attribute appearance
. The value
of the attribute consists of one of the following values:
"full": all choices should be rendered at all times.
"compact": a fixed number of choices should be rendered, with scrolling facilities as needed
"minimal": a minimum number of choices should be rendered, with a facility to temporarily render additional choices
Data Binding Restrictions: any simpleContent capable of holding
a sequence. The restriction to binding simpleContent exists when
the choices are authored as part of the user interface control as
shown in this section. Element itemset
for creating
dynamic selections described in 9.3.3 The itemset Element
allows the available choices to be obtained from an XForms Model,
and when using that construct, the data binding restriction to
simpleContent is relaxed.
Note:
A limitation of the XML Schema list datatypes is that white
space characters in the storage values (the value
element) are always interpreted as separators between individual
data values. Therefore, authors should avoid using white space
characters within storage values with list simpleContent.
<item> <value>United States of America</value> ... </item>
When selected, this item would introduce not one but four additional selection values: "America", "of", "States", and "United".
Implementation Requirements: The label for each choice must be
presented, allowing at any number of selections, possibly none.
This form control stores the values corresponding to the selected
choices as a space separated list in the location addressed by
attribute ref
. The values to be stored are either
directly specified as the contents of element value
,
or specified indirectly through binding attributes on element
value
.
Note that the datatype bound to this form control may include a
non-enumerated value space, e.g., xsd:string
, or a
union of a enumeration and a non-enumerated datatype (called an
open enumeration). In this case, control select
may
have attribute selection="open"
. The form control
should then allow free data entry, as described in 8.1.2 The input Element. The form control
may permit multiple values to be entered through free entry.
For closed selections: If the initial instance value matches the storage value of one or more of the given items, those items are selected. If there is no match, no items are initially selected. If any selected values do not have a choice with a matching storage value, the form control must indicate an out-of-range condition.
For open selections: If the initial instance values match the
storage value specified by one or more of the items, the all such
matching items are selected. If the initial instance values do not
match the storage value specified by one or more of the items, all
such non-matching items are included as selected values, as if
entered through free entry. Free entry text is handled the same as
form control input
8.1.2 The
input Element, possibly in multiplicity. When using dynamic
selections with complexTypes, open selection has no effect.
Implementation Hints: An accessibility aid might allow the user to browse through the available choices and leverage the grouping of choices in the markup to provide enhanced navigation through long lists of choices.
Description: This form control allows the user to make a single selection from multiple choices.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding
Special Attributes:
Optional attribute determining whether free entry is allowed in the list. Default is "closed".
When true
, this form control will generate
additional xforms-value-changed
events. The default
for this form control is true
.
Example:
<select1 ref="my:flavor"> <label>Flavor</label> <item> <label>Vanilla</label> <value>v</value> </item> <item> <label>Strawberry</label> <value>s</value> </item> <item> <label>Chocolate</label> <value>c</value> </item> </select1>
In the above example, selecting one of the choices will result
in the associated value given by element value
on the
selected item being set in the underlying instance data at the
location icecream/flavor
.
A graphical browser might render this form control as any of the following:
appearance="full" | appearance="compact" | appearance="minimal" |
---|---|---|
Data Binding Restrictions: Binds to any simpleContent. The
restriction to binding simpleContent exists when the choices are
authored as part of the user interface control as shown in this
section. Element itemset
for creating dynamic
selections described in 9.3.3 The itemset Element
allows the available choices to be obtained from an XForms Model,
and when using that construct, the data binding restriction to
simpleContent is relaxed.
Implementation Requirements: The label for each choice must be
presented, allowing at all times exactly one selection. This form
control stores the value corresponding to the selected choice in
the location addressed by attribute ref
. The value to
be stored is either directly specified as the contents of element
value
, or specified indirectly through binding
attributes on element value
.
Note that the datatype bound to this form control may include a
non-enumerated value space, e.g., xsd:string
, or a
union of a enumeration and a non-enumerated datatype (called an
open enumeration). In this case, control select1
may
have attribute selection="open"
. The form control
should then allow free data entry, as described in 8.1.2 The input Element.
For closed selections: If the initial instance value matches the storage value of one of the given items, that item is selected. If there is no match, the form control must indicate an out-of-range condition..
For open selections: If the initial instance value matches the
storage value specified by one of the items, the first such
matching item is selected. Otherwise, the selected value is the
initial lexical value. Free entry text is handled the same as form
control input
8.1.2 The input
Element.
User interfaces may choose to render this form control as a
pulldown list or group of radio buttons, among other options. The
appearance
attribute offers a hint as to which
rendering might be most appropriate, although any styling
information (such as CSS) should take precedence.
This element is used within selection form controls to group
available choices. This provides the same functionality as element
optgroup
in HTML.
Common Attributes: Common
This element specifies the storage value and label to represent
an item in a list. It is found within elements select1
and select
, or grouped in element
choices
.
Common Attributes: Common
This element provides a storage value to be used when an
item
is selected.
Common Attributes: Common, Single Node Binding (optional)
Data Binding Restriction: All lexical values must be valid according to the datatype bound to the selection control.
If inline content and a ref
attribute are both
specified, the ref
attribute is used.
The child elements detailed below provide the ability to attach metadata to form controls.
Instead of supplying such metadata e.g., the label for a form
control as inline content of the contained element
label
, the metadata can be pointed to by using a
simple linking attribute src
on these elements. Notice
that systematic use of this feature can be exploited in
internationalizing XForms user interfaces by:
Factoring all human readable messages to a separate resource XML file.
Using URIs into this XML resource bundle within individual
label
elements
Finally, an XForms implementation could use content negotiation
to obtain the appropriate XML resource bundle, e.g., based on the
accept-language
headers from the client, to serve up
the user interface with messages localized to the client's
locale.
Binding attributes on optional element filename
specify the location in the instance for the parent element
upload
, when activated, to place the filename for the
chosen binary resource. For security reasons, upload
must not take action due to any existing value of the node.
Common Attributes: Common, Single Node Binding
In the following example, the user is prompted to select an
image. When activated, upload
places in
mail/attachment
either the binary data of the image or
a URI for it, depending on the type declared for the
mail/attachment
. The filename, perhaps
"me.jpg
", is placed in the attribute node
mail/attachment@filename
, and the mediatype, perhaps
"image/jpeg
" in the attribute node
mail/attachment@mediatype
.
Example:
<upload ref="mail/attachment" mediatype="image/*"> <label>Select an image to attach</label> <filename ref="@filename"/> <mediatype ref="@mediatype"/> </upload>
Binding attributes on optional element mediatype
specify the location in the instance for the parent element
upload
, when activated, to place the mediatype of the
chosen binary resource, if available.
Common Attributes: Common, Single Node Binding
This required element labels the containing form control with a descriptive label. Additionally, the label makes it possible for someone who can't see the form control to obtain a short description while navigating between form controls.
Common Attributes: Common, Single Node Binding (optional), Linking
Special Attributes:
Link to external label. If the link traversal fails, it is treated as an error (4.5.3 The xforms-link-error Event).
The label specified can exist in instance data, in a remote document, or as inline text. If more than one source of label is specified in this element, the order of precedence is: single node binding attributes, linking attributes, inline text.
An accessibility aid might speak the metadata encapsulated here when the containing form control gets focus.
The optional element help
provides a convenient way
to attach help information to a form control. This is equivalent to
a <message level="modeless" ev:event="xforms-help"
ev:propagate="stop">
.
Common Attributes: Common, Single Node Binding (optional), Linking
Special Attributes:
Link to external help information. If the link traversal fails, it is treated as an error (4.5.3 The xforms-link-error Event).
The message specified can exist in instance data, in a remote document, or as inline text. If more than one source of message is specified in this element, the order of precedence is: single node binding attributes, linking attributes, inline text.
An example of this element is at 10.1.12 The message Element.
The optional element hint
provides a convenient way
to attach hint information to a form control. This is equivalent to
a handler for event xforms-hint
that responds with a
<message level="ephemeral">
.
Common Attributes: Common, Single Node Binding (optional), Linking
Special Attributes:
Link to external hint. If the link traversal fails, it is treated as an error (4.5.3 The xforms-link-error Event).
The message specified can exist in instance data, in a remote document, or as inline text. If more than one source of message is specified in this element, the order of precedence is: single node binding attributes, linking attributes, inline text.
An example of this element is at 10.1.12 The message Element.
The optional element alert
provides a convenient
way to attach alert or error information to a form control.
Rendering of this element is implementation-defined, and there is
no default level
such as modal
or
ephemeral
for the displayed message.
Common Attributes: Common, Single Node Binding (optional), Linking
Special Attributes:
Link to external alert. If the link traversal fails, it is treated as an error (4.5.3 The xforms-link-error Event).
The message specified can exist in instance data, in a remote document, or as inline text. If more than one source of message is specified in this element, the order of precedence is: single node binding attributes, linking attributes, inline text. See F XForms and Styling for examples to see how this might be presented to the user.
This chapter covers XForms features for combining form controls into user interfaces.
All form controls defined in 8 Form Controls are treated as individual units for purposes of visual layout e.g., in XHTML processing. Aggregation of form controls with markup defined in this chapter provides semantics about the relationship among user interface controls; such knowledge can be useful in delivering a coherent UI to small devices. For example, if the user interface needs to be split up over several screens, controls appearing inside the same aggregation would typically be rendered on the same screen or page. The elements and attributes included in this module are:
Element | Attributes | Minimal Content Model |
---|---|---|
group | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding (optional) | label?, ((Form Controls)|group|switch|repeat|UI Common)* |
The group
element is used as a container for
defining a hierarchy of form controls. Groups can be nested to
create complex hierarchies. A group is considered to be
non-relevant if and only if the single node binding resolves to an
empty nodeset or a non-relevant node.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding (optional)
Note:
If a group is non-relevant, then the rendering approach used to signify non-relevance is applied to the entire content of the group.
The optional label
element has special significance
when it appears as the first element child of group
,
representing a label for the entire group.
Example:
<group ref="address"> <label>Shipping Address</label> <input ref="line_1"> <label>Address line 1</label> </input> <input ref="line_2"> <label>Address line 2</label> </input> <input ref="postcode"> <label>Postcode</label> </input> </group>
Setting the input focus on a group results in the focus being set to the first form control in the navigation order within that group.
This section defines a switch construct that allows the creation of user interfaces where the user interface can be varied based on user actions and events. The elements and attributes included in this module are:
Element | Attributes | Minimal Content Model |
---|---|---|
switch | Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding (optional) | case+ |
case | Common, selected (xsd:boolean) | label?, ((Form Controls)|group|switch|repeat)* |
toggle | Common, case (xsd:IDREF) | EMPTY |
This element contains one or more case
elements,
any one of which is rendered at a given time. The
non-relevance of a switch is determined in the same way as it is
for group
and similarly applies to the entire
content.
Note:
This is separate from XForms relevant
processing
(see 6.1.4 The relevant
Property), which is based on the current state of the
XForms Model. As an example, portions of a questionnaire pertaining
to the user's automobile may become relevant only if the user has
answered in the affirmative to the question 'Do you own a
car?'.
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Single Node Binding (optional)
Example:
<switch> <case id="in" selected="true"> <input ref="yourname"> <label>Please tell me your name</label> <toggle ev:event="DOMActivate" case="out"/> </input> </case> <case id="out" selected="false"> <html:p>Hello <output ref="yourname" /> <trigger id="editButton"> <label>Edit</label> <toggle ev:event="DOMActivate" case="in"/> </trigger> </html:p> </case> </switch>
The above results in the portion of the user interface contained
in the first case
being displayed initially. This
prompts for the user's name; filling in a value and
activating the control e.g., by pressing
enter
results switches to the alternate case, with a
read-only output
rendering. Activating the trigger
labeled "Edit" in turn switches back to the original case.
This element encloses markup to be conditionally rendered. The
attribute selected
determines the initial
selected state.
Common Attributes: Common
Special Attributes:
Optional selection status for the case. The default value is "false".
If multiple case
s within a switch
are
marked as selected="true"
, the first selected
case
remains and all others are deselected. If none
are selected, the first becomes selected.
This XForms Action selects one possible case from an exclusive
list of alternatives in a switch
.
This action adjusts all selected
states (not
the attribute values) on the affected case
s to
reflect the new state of the switch
containing
the identified case
, and then performs the
following:
Dispatching an xforms-deselect
event to the
currently selected case
.
Dispatching an xform-select
event to the
case
to be selected.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Required reference to a case
element.
The XForms specification allows the definition of repeating
structures such as multiple items within a purchase order. When
defining the XForms Model, such higher-level collections are
constructed out of basic building blocks; similarly, this section
defines user interface construct repeat
that can bind
to data structures such as lists and collections. The elements and
attributes included in this module are:
Element | Attributes | Minimal Content Model |
---|---|---|
repeat | Common, UI Common, Node Set Binding, startindex (xsd:positiveInteger), number (xsd:nonNegativeInteger) | ((Form Controls)|group|repeat)* |
itemset | Common, Node Set Binding | label, (value|copy), (UI Common)* |
copy | Common, Single Node Binding (optional) | EMPTY |
insert | Common, Events, Node Set Binding, at (XPathExpression), position ("before"|"after") | EMPTY |
delete | Common, Events, Node Set Binding, at (XPathExpression) | EMPTY |
setindex | Common, Events, repeat (xsd:IDREF), index (XPathExpression) | EMPTY |
(various) | [repeat-nodeset, repeat-bind, repeat-model] (Node Set Binding attributes), repeat-startindex (xsd:positiveInteger), repeat-number (xsd:nonNegativeInteger) | N/A |
This element defines a UI mapping over a
homogeneous collection selected by Node Set Binding
Attributes. This node-set must consist of contiguous child element
nodes, with the same local name and namespace name of a common
parent node. The behavior of element repeat
with
respect to non-homogeneous node-sets is undefined.
For example:
<repeat nodeset="/cart/items/item"> <input ref="." ...> <label>...</label> </input> <html:br/> </repeat>
Common Attributes: Common, UI Common, Node Set Binding
Special Attributes:
Optional 1-based initial value of the repeat index. The default value is 1.
Optional hint to the XForms Processor as to how many elements from the collection to display.
This element operates over a homogeneous collection by binding
the encapsulated user interface controls to each element of the
collection. Attributes on this element specify how many members of
the collection are presented to the user at any given time. XForms
Actions insert
, delete
, and
setindex
can be used to operate on the
collection—see 10 XForms
Actions. Another way to view repeat processing
(disregarding special user interface interactions) is to consider
"unrolling" the repeat. The above example is similar to the
following (given four item
elements in the returned
node-set):
<!-- unrolled repeat --> <group ref="/cart/items/item[1]"><input ref="." .../><html:br/></group> <group ref="/cart/items/item[2]"><input ref="." .../><html:br/></group> <group ref="/cart/items/item[3]"><input ref="." .../><html:br/></group> <group ref="/cart/items/item[4]"><input ref="." .../><html:br/></group>
<model> <instance> <my:lines> <my:line name="a"> <my:price>3.00</my:price> </my:line> <my:line name="b"> <my:price>32.25</my:price> </my:line> <my:line name="c"> <my:price>132.99</my:price> </my:line> </my:lines> </instance> </model> ... <repeat id="lineset" nodeset="/my:lines/my:line"> <input ref="my:price"> <label>Line Item</label> </input> <input ref="@name"> <label>Name</label> </input> </repeat> <trigger> <label>Insert a new item after the current one</label> <action ev:event="DOMActivate"> <insert nodeset="/my:lines/my:line" at="index('lineset')" position="after"/> <setvalue ref="/my:lines/my:line[index('lineset')]/@name"/> <setvalue ref="/my:lines/my:line[index('lineset')]/price">0.00</setvalue> </action> </trigger> <trigger> <label>remove current item</label> <delete ev:event="activate" nodeset="/my:lines/my:line" at="index('lineset')"/> </trigger>
Element repeat
enables the creation of user
interfaces for populating repeating structures. When using XForms
within host languages like XHTML, it is often necessary to create
repeating structures within constructs such as table
.
Thus, one might wish to use element repeat
within a
table
to create the rows of a table, where each row of
the table binds to a distinct member of a homogeneous collection.
Since html:table
doesn't (and probably never will)
allow xforms:repeat
elements as children, another
syntax is needed.
<table> <repeat nodeset="..."> <tr> <td>...</td> ... </tr> </repeat> </table>
More generally, there is a need to integrate repeat behavior
into host languages at points where the content model of the host
language does not or cannot provide the appropriate extension hooks
via modularization. To accommodate this, XForms 1.0 defines an
alternative syntax that is functionally equivalent to the
repeat
element, using the following attributes:
repeat-model
repeat-bind
repeat-nodeset
repeat-startindex
repeat-number
The above attributes are equivalent to the repeat
attributes of the same name, but without the prefix
repeat-
. A host language can include these attributes
in the appropriate places to enable repeating constructs. For
example, a version of XHTML might use:
<html:table xforms:repeat-nodeset="..."> <html:tr> <html:td><xforms:output ref="..."/></html:td> </html:tr> </html:table>
Which could be validated against an appropriately configured
XHTML Schema that includes the XForms Repeat module. Note that what
gets repeated is the child elements of the element with the
repeat-
attributes.
This should be thought purely as a syntactic transformation,
i.e., there is no change to repeat processing semantics. Further,
for purposes of understanding the above as a pure syntactic
transformation, element repeat
can be viewed as
containing an anonymous group
that wraps the contents
of element repeat
. Thus, consider the following:
<repeat ...> ... </repeat>
is equivalent to
<repeat ...> <group ref=".">...</group> </repeat>
Which is equivalent to
<group repeat-...> ... </group>
Note:
A consequence of this equivalence is that the expressed single node binding on the group implies the applicability of non-relevance.
Additionally, when using XForms Action setindex
,
attribute repeat
of type idref
can point
to any element carrying the repeat attributes. Similarly, when
using function index
against a repeating structure
created via the repeat-
attributes, the id
of that element can be used as the argument to function
index
.
This element allows the creation of dynamic selections within
controls select
and select1
, where the
available choices are determined at run-time. The node-set that
holds the available choices is specified via attribute
nodeset
. As with repeat
, this nodeset
should refer to a homogeneous collection. Child elements
label
and value
indirectly specify the
label and storage values. Notice that the run-time effect of
itemset
is the same as using element
choices
to statically author the available
choices.
Common Attributes: Common, Node Set Binding
Note:
Whenever a refresh
event is dispatched the
nodeset
is re-evaluated to update the list of
available choices.
The following example shows element itemset
within
control select
to specify a dynamic list of ice cream
flavors:
<model id="cone"> <instance> <my:icecream> <my:order/> </my:icecream> </instance> </model> <model id="flavors"> <instance> <my:flavors> <my:flavor type="v"> <my:description>Vanilla</my:description> </my:flavor> <my:flavor type="s"> <my:description>Strawberry</my:description> </my:flavor> <my:flavor type="c"> <my:description>Chocolate</my:description> </my:flavor> </my:flavors> </instance> </model> <!-- user interaction markup --> <select model="cone" ref="my:order"> <label>Flavors</label> <itemset model="flavors" nodeset="/my:flavors/my:flavor"> <label ref="my:description"/> <copy ref="my:description"/> </itemset> </select> <!-- For all three items selected, this example produces instance data like <my:icecream> <my:order> <my:description>Vanilla</my:description> <my:description>Strawberry</my:description> <my:description>Chocolate</my:description> </my:order> </my:icecream> -->
Structurally, this element is similar to 8.2.3 The value Element. It
differs in that it can only be used within itemset
,
and that it works with subtrees of instance data rather than simple
values.
Common Attributes: Common, Single Node Binding (optional)
When an item
becomes selected, the following rules
apply:
The target node, selected by the binding attributes on the list form control, must be an element node, otherwise an exception results (4.5.1 The xforms-binding-exception Event).
The element node associated with the item
, selected
by the binding attributes on copy
, is deep copied as a
child of the target node.
A full computational dependency rebuild is done.
When an item
becomes unselected, the following
rules apply:
The target node, selected by the binding attributes on the list form control, must be an element node, otherwise an exception results (4.5.1 The xforms-binding-exception Event).
The child element node associated with the item
,
selected by the binding attributes on copy
, is
deleted.
A full computational dependency rebuild.
This action is used to insert new entries into a homogeneous
collection, e.g., a set of items in a shopping cart. Attributes of
action insert
specify the insertion in terms of the
collection in which a new entry is to be inserted, and the location
within that collection where the new node will appear. The new node
is created by cloning the final member of the homogeneous
collection. In this process, nodes of type xsd:ID
are
modified to remain as unique values in the instance data.
Common Attributes: Common, Events, Node Set Binding
Special Attributes:
Required XPath expression evaluated to determine insert location.
Required selector ("before" or "after") of insert before/after behavior.
The rules for insert
processing are as follows:
The homogeneous collection to be updated is determined by evaluating the Node Set Binding. If the collection is empty, the insert action has no effect.
The node-set binding identifies a homogeneous collection
in the instance data. The final member of this collection is
cloned to produce the node that will be inserted. Finally, this
newly created node is inserted into the instance data at the
location specified by attributes position
and
at
.
Attribute at
is evaluated to determine the
insertion index – a numerical value that is the index into
the node-set. The attribute at
is evaluated with
the first node in document order from the node set binding as the
context node, the size of the node set binding as the context size
and 1 as the context position. Attribute
position
specifies whether the new node is inserted
before or after this index.
The rules for selecting the index are as follows:
The return value of the XPath expression in attribute
at
is processed according to the rules of the XPath
function round()
. For example, the literal
1.5
becomes 2
, and the literal
'string'
becomes NaN
.
If the result is NaN
, the insert appends to the end
of the node-set.
If the resulting index is outside the valid range of the
node-set, it is replaced with either 1
or the size of
the node-set, whichever is closer.
The index for any repeating sequence that is bound to the
homogeneous collection where the node was added is updated to point
to the newly added node. The indexes for inner nested repeat
collections are re-initialized to
startindex
.
If the insert is successful, the event
xforms-insert
is dispatched.
This action results in the insertion of newly created data nodes into the XForms instance data. Such nodes are constructed as defined in the initialization section of the processing model—see 4.2 Initialization Events. As an example, this causes the instantiation of the necessary user interface for populating a new entry in the underlying collection when used in conjunction with repeating structures.
Note:
If this action is contained within an action
element, it has special deferred update behavior (10.1.1 The action Element).
An example of using insert
with a repeating
structure is located at 9.3.1 The repeat
Element. Note that XForms Action setvalue
can
be used in conjunction with insert
to provide initial
values for the newly inserted nodes.
This action deletes nodes from the instance data.
Common Attributes: Common, Events, Node Set Binding
Special Attributes:
Required XPath expression evaluated to determine delete location.
The rules for delete
processing are as follows:
The homogeneous collection to be updated is determined by evaluating the Node Set Binding. If the collection is empty, the delete action has no effect.
The n
-th element node is deleted from the instance
data, where n
represents the number returned from
node-set index evaluation, defined in 9.3.5 The insert Element. If no
n
th node exists, the operation has no effect.
The index should point to the same node after a delete as it did before the delete except:
When the last remaining item in the collection is removed, the index position becomes 0.
When the index was pointing to the deleted node, which was the last item in the collection, the index will point to the new last node of the collection and the index of inner repeats is reinitialized.
When the index was pointing to the deleted node, which was not the last item in the collection, the index position is not changed and the index of inner repeats is re-initialized.
To re-initialize a repeat means to change the index to 0 if it is empty, otherwise 1.
If the delete is successful, the event
xforms-delete
is dispatched.
This action results in deletion of nodes in the instance data.
Note:
If this action is contained within an action
element, it has special deferred update behavior (10.1.1 The action Element).
An example of using delete
with a repeating
structure is located at 9.3.1 The repeat
Element.
This action marks a specific item as current in a repeating sequence (within 9.3.1 The repeat Element).
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Required reference to a repeating element.
Required XPath expression that evaluates to a 1-based offset into the sequence.
If the selected index is 0 or less, an
xforms-scroll-first
event is dispatched and the index
is set to 1. If the selected index is greater than the index of the
last repeat item, an xforms-scroll-last
event is
dispatched and the index is set to that of the last item. If
the index evaluates to NaN the action has no effect. The
indexes for inner nested repeat collections are re-initialized to
startindex
. The implementation data
structures for tracking computational dependencies are rebuilt or
updated as a result of this action.
The markup contained within the body of element
repeat
specifies the user interface to be generated
for each member of the underlying collection. During user interface
initialization (see 4.2.2 The
xforms-model-construct-done Event), the following steps are
performed for repeat
:
The Node Set Binding is evaluated to locate the
homogeneous collection to be operated on by this
repeat
.
The index for this repeating structure is initialized
to the value of startindex
. If the initial
startindex
is less than 1 it defaults to 1. If the
index is greater than the initial node-set then it defaults to the
size of the node-set.
User interface as specified by the repeat
is
generated for the requisite number of members of the collection as
specified by attributes on element repeat
.
The processing model for repeating structures uses an
index that points to the current item in the
instance data. This repeat index is accessed via XForms function
index
7.8.5 The index()
Function and manipulated via XForms Action
setindex
9.3.7
The setindex Element. This index is used as a reference
point for insert
and delete
operations.
Notice that the contained XForms form controls inside element
repeat
do not explicitly specify the index of the
collection entry being populated. This is intentional; it keeps
both authoring as well as the processing model simple.
The binding expression attached to the repeating sequence
returns a node-set of the collection being populated, not an
individual node. Within the body of element repeat
,
binding expressions are evaluated with a context node of the node
determined by the index. Repeat processing uses XPath expressions
to address the collection over which element repeat
operates.
The form controls appearing inside repeat
need to
be suitable for populating individual items of the collection. A
simple but powerful consequence of the above is that if the XForms
Model specifies nested collections, then a corresponding user
interface can nest repeat
elements.
It is possible to nest repeat elements to create more powerful
user interface for editing structured data. G.2 Editing Hierarchical Bookmarks
Using XForms is an example of a form using nested repeats
to edit hierarchical data consisting of bookmarks within multiple
sections. . Consider the following insert
statement
that appears as part of that example.
<xforms:insert nodeset="/bookmarks/section[index('repeatSections')]/bookmark" at="index('repeatBookmarks')" position="after"/>
The above insert
statement is used in that example
to add new bookmark entries into the currently selected
section. The inner (nested) repeat operates on bookmarks in this
selected section; The index—as returned by XForms function
index
—for this inner repeat starts at
1
. Hence, after a new empty section of bookmarks is
created and becomes current, the first insert
bookmark operation adds the newly created bookmark at the
front of the list.
Element repeat
enables the binding of user
interaction to a homogeneous collection. The number of displayed
items might be less than the total number available in the
collection. In this case, the presentation would render only a
portion of the repeating items at a given time. For example, a
graphical user interface might present a scrolling table. The
current item indicated by the repeat index should be made available
to the user at all times, for example, not allowed to scroll out of
view. The XForms Actions enumerated at 10
XForms Actions may be used within event listeners to
manipulate the homogeneous collection being populated by scrolling,
inserting, and deleting entries.
Notice that the markup encapsulated by element
repeat
acts as the template for the user interaction
that is presented to the user. As a consequence, it is not possible
to refer to portions of the generated user interface via statically
authored idref
attributes. A necessary consequence of
this is that XForms 1.0 does not specify the behavior of construct
switch
within element repeat
. Future
versions of XForms may specify the behavior of switch
inside repeat
based on implementation experience and
user feedback.
This chapter defines an XML Events-based [XML Events] common set of actions that can be invoked in response to events.
Note:
XForms itself defines no method for script-based event handling. The definition of such facilities is a responsibility of the hosting language.
All form controls defined in this specification have a set of common behaviors that encourage consistent authoring and look and feel for XForms-based applications. This consistency comes from attaching a common set of behaviors to the various form controls. In conjunction with the event binding mechanism provided by XML Events, these handlers provide a flexible means for forms authors to specify event processing at appropriate points within the XForms user interface. XForms Actions are declarative XML event handlers that capture high-level semantics. As a consequence, they significantly enhance the accessibility of XForms-based applications in comparison to previous Web technologies that relied exclusively on scripting.
The elements and attributes included in this module are:
Element | Attributes | Minimal Content Model |
---|---|---|
action | Common, Events | (Action)+ |
dispatch | Common, Events, name (xsd:NMTOKEN), target (xsd:IDREF), bubbles (xsd:boolean), cancelable (xsd:boolean) | EMPTY |
rebuild | Common, Events, model (xsd:IDREF) | EMPTY |
recalculate | Common, Events, model (xsd:IDREF) | EMPTY |
revalidate | Common, Events, model (xsd:IDREF) | EMPTY |
refresh | Common, Events, model (xsd:IDREF) | EMPTY |
setfocus | Common, Events, control (xsd:IDREF) | EMPTY |
load | Common, Events, Single Node Binding (optional), resource (xsd:anyURI), show ("new" | "replace") | EMPTY |
setvalue | Common, Events, Single Node Binding, value (XPathExpression) | PCDATA |
send | Common, Events, submission (xsd:IDREF) | EMPTY |
reset | Common, Events, model (xsd:IDREF) | EMPTY |
message | Common, Events, Single Node Binding (optional), Linking, level ("ephemeral" | "modeless" | "modal") | (PCDATA|UI Inline)* |
See also: 9.2.3 The toggle Element; 9.3.5 The insert Element; 9.3.6 The delete Element; and 9.3.7 The setindex Element.
This module also defines the content set
"Action", which includes the following elements (of these,
toggle
comes from the XForms Switch module, and
insert
, delete
, and setindex
come from the XForms Repeat module):
(action|dispatch|rebuild|refresh|recalculate|revalidate|setfocus| load|setvalue|send|reset|message|toggle|insert|delete|setindex)*
Additionally, this module defines the attribute group "XML Events", which includes all of the "global" attributes defined in that specification ([XML Events]).
The following example shows how events can be used:
<xforms:trigger> <xforms:label>Reset</xforms:label> <xforms:reset ev:event="DOMActivate" model="thismodel"/> </xforms:trigger>
This example recreates the behavior of the HTML reset control, which this specification does not define as an independent form control.
For each built-in XForms Action, this chapter lists the following:
Name
Common Attributes
Special Attributes
Description of behavior
All elements defined in this chapter explicitly allow global attributes from the XML Events namespace, and apply the processing defined in that specification in section 2.3 [XML Events].
This action causes its child actions to be invoked in the order that they are specified in the document.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
<trigger> <label>Click me</label> <action ev:event="DOMActivate"> <reset model="thismodel"/> <setvalue ref="."/> </action> </trigger>
Deferred Updates: Many XForms Actions have a deferred
effect on the instance data when specified as a descendant of an
action
element.
Implementations are free to use any strategy to accomplish
deferred updates, but the end result must be as follows: Instance
data changes performed by a set of actions do not result in
immediate computation dependency rebuilding, recalculation,
revalidate and form control refreshing until the termination of the
outermost action handler, as described here. Each outermost action
handler can be thought of as having a set of Boolean flags,
initially false
, to indicate whether each of the
actions rebuild
, recalculate
,
revalidate
, and refresh
are required upon
termination of the outer action handler.
Actions that directly invoke rebuild, recalculate, revalidate, or refresh always have an immediate effect, and clear the corresponding flag. The XForms Actions in this category are:
rebuild
recalculate
revalidate
refresh
XForms Actions that change the tree structure of instance data
result in setting all four flags to true
. The XForms
Actions in this category are:
insert
delete
XForms Actions that change only the value of an instance node
results in setting the flags for recalculate
,
revalidate
, and refresh
to
true
and making no change to the flag for
rebuild
. The XForms Actions in this category are:
setvalue
Finally, the reset
action takes effect immediately
and clears all of the flags.
This action dispatches an XForms Event to a specific element
identified by the target
attribute. Two kinds of event
can be dispatched:
Predefined XForms events (i.e., xforms-event-name), in which
case the bubbles
and cancelable
attributes are ignored and the standard semantics as defined in
4 Processing Model apply.
An event created by the XForms author with no predefined XForms semantics and as such not handled by default by the XForms Processor.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Required name of the event to dispatch.
Required reference to the event target.
Optional boolean indicating if this event bubbles—as defined in [DOM2 Events]. The default value depends on the definition of a custom event. For predefined events, this attribute has no effect.
Optional boolean indicating if this event is cancelable—as defined in [DOM2 Events]. The default value depends on the definition of a custom event. For predefined events, this attribute has no effect.
This action causes the processing of xforms-rebuild
to happen, bypassing the normal event flow. This action results in
the XForms Processor rebuilding any internal data structures used
to track computational dependencies among instance data nodes
—see 4.3.7 The xforms-rebuild
Event.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Optional XForms Model selector, as defined in 3.2.3 Single-Node Binding Attributes.
Note:
If this action is contained within an action
element, it has special deferred update behavior (10.1.1 The action Element).
This action causes the processing of
xforms-recalculate
to happen, bypassing the normal
event flow. As a result, instance data nodes whose values need to
be recalculated are updated as specified in the processing
model—see 4.3.6 The
xforms-recalculate Event.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Optional XForms Model selector, as defined in 3.2.3 Single-Node Binding Attributes.
Note:
If this action is contained within an action
element, it has special deferred update behavior (10.1.1 The action Element).
This action causes the processing of
xforms-revalidate
to happen, bypassing the normal
event flow. This results in the instance data being revalidated as
specified by the processing model—see 4.3.5 The xforms-revalidate Event.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Optional XForms Model selector, as defined in 3.2.3 Single-Node Binding Attributes.
Note:
If this action is contained within an action
element, it has special deferred update behavior (10.1.1 The action Element).
This action causes the processing of xforms-refresh
to happen, bypassing the normal event flow. This action results in
the XForms user interface being refreshed, and the
presentation of user interface controls being updated to reflect
the state of the underlying instance data—see 4.3.4 The xforms-refresh Event.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Optional XForms Model selector, as defined in 3.2.3 Single-Node Binding Attributes.
Note:
If this action is contained within an action
element, it has special deferred update behavior (10.1.1 The action Element).
This action dispatches an xforms-focus
event
(4.3.2 The xforms-focus Event) to
the element identified by attribute control
.
Note that this event is implicitly invoked to implement XForms
accessibility features such as accesskey
.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Required reference to a form control.
Setting focus to a repeating structure sets the focus to the repeat item represented by the repeat index.
This action traverses the specified link.
Common Attributes: Common, Events, Single Node Binding (optional)
Special Attributes:
Link to external resource to load, defined as an [XLink 1.0] link between this element and the
remote resource indicated. No XLink actuate
value is
defined, since control of actuation is defined by XML Events. The
XLink show
value depends on the show
attribute. If the link traversal fails, it is treated as an error
(4.5.3 The xforms-link-error
Event).
Optional link behavior specifier. If this attribute is missing, a default value of "replace" is assumed.
Either the single node binding attributes, pointing to a URI in the instance data, or the linking attributes are required. If both are present, the action has no effect.
Possible values for attribute show
have the
following processing for the document (or portion of a document)
reached by traversing the link:
The document is loaded into a new presentation context, e.g., a new window. Form processing in the original window continues.
The document is loaded into the current window. Form processing is interrupted, exactly as if the user had manually requested navigating to a new document.
This action explicitly sets the value of the specified instance data node.
Common Attributes: Common, Events, Single Node Binding
Special Attributes:
Optional XPath expression to evaluate, with the result stored in the selected instance data node. The evaluation context for this XPath expression is the result from the Single Node Binding.
The element content of setvalue
specifies the
literal value to set; this is an alternative to specifying a
computed value via attribute value
. The following two
examples contrast these approaches:
<setvalue bind="put-here" value="a/b/c"/>
This causes the string value at a/b/c
in the
instance data to be placed on the single node selected by the bind
element with id="put-here"
.
<setvalue bind="put-here">literal string</setvalue>
This causes the value "literal string" to be placed on the
single node selected by the bind element with
id="put-here"
.
If neither a value
attribute nor text content are
present, the effect is to set the value of the selected node to the
empty string (""). If both are present, the value
attribute is used.
All strings are inserted into the instance data as follows:
Element nodes: If the element has any child text nodes, the first text node is replaced with one corresponding to the new value. If no child text nodes are present, a text node is created, corresponding to the new value, and appended as the first child node.
Attribute nodes: The string-value of the attribute is replaced with a string corresponding to the new value.
Text nodes: The text node is replaced with a new one corresponding to the new value.
Namespace, processing instruction, comment, and the XPath root node: behavior is undefined.
Note:
If this action is contained within an action
element, it has special deferred update behavior (10.1.1 The action Element).
This action initiates submit processing by dispatching an
xforms-submit
event. Processing of event
xforms-submit
is defined in the processing
model—see 4.3.9 The xforms-submit
Event.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Required reference to a submission
element.
Note:
This XForms Action is a convenient way of expressing the following:
<dispatch target="mysubmitinfo" name="xforms-submit"/>
This action initiates reset processing by dispatching an
xforms-reset
event to the specified
model
. Processing of event xforms-reset
is defined in the processing model—see 4.3.8 The xforms-reset Event.
Common Attributes: Common, Events
Special Attributes:
Optional XForms Model selector, as defined in 3.2.3 Single-Node Binding Attributes.
Note:
If this action is contained within an action
element, it has special deferred update behavior (10.1.1 The action Element).
This action encapsulates a message to be displayed to the user.
Common Attributes: Common, Events, Single Node Binding (optional)
Special Attributes:
Link to external message. If the link traversal fails, it is treated as an error (4.5.3 The xforms-link-error Event).
Required message level identifier, one of ("ephemeral"|"modeless"|"modal"|QName-but-not-NCName). This specification does not define behavior for QName values.
The message specified can exist in instance data, in a remote document, or as inline text. If more than one source of message is specified in this element, the order of precedence is: single node binding attributes, linking attributes, inline text.
A graphical browser might render a modal message as follows:
<model> <message level="modal" ev:event="xforms-ready">This is not a drill!</message> ... </model>
A modeless message is the foundation for displaying a
help
message, which a graphical browser might render
as follows:
<secret ref="/login/password"> <label>Password</label> <help>Have you forgotten your password? Simply call 1-900-555-1212 and have a major credit card handy.</help> </secret>
An ephemeral message is the foundation for displaying a
hint
message, which a graphical browser might render
as follows:
<input ref="po/address/street1"> <label>Street</label> <hint>Please enter the number and street name</hint> </input>
insert
, delete
and
setindex
In addition to the action handlers detailed in this chapter, XForms defines three actions as part of the XForms Repeat module: 9.3.5 The insert Element, 9.3.6 The delete Element, and 9.3.7 The setindex Element.
XForms is designed to gather instance data, serialize it into an external representation, and submit it with a protocol. XForms defines a set of options for serialization and submission. The following sections define the processing of instance data for submission, and the behavior for the serialization and submission options.
Submission begins with the default action for a
xforms-submit
event.
Target: submission
Bubbles: Yes
Cancelable: Yes
Context Info: None
Under no circumstances may more than a single concurrent submit
process be under way for a particular XForms
submission. From the start of the default action of
xforms-submit
, until the completion of the default
action for xforms-submit-done
or
xforms-submit-error
, the default action for subsequent
xforms-submit
events is to do nothing.
Otherwise, default action for this event results in the following steps:
A node from the instance data is selected, based on attributes
on the submission
element. The indicated node and all
nodes for which it is an ancestor are considered for the remainder
of the submit process. Any node which is considered not
relevant as defined in 6.1.4 The
relevant Property is removed.
All selected instance data nodes are checked for validity
according to the definition in 4.3.5
The xforms-revalidate Event (no notification events
are marked for dispatching due to this operation). Any
selected instance data node that is required but
empty or found to be invalid stops submission
processing after dispatching event
xforms-submit-error
.
Selected instance data is serialized according to the rules stated at 11.2 Submission Options.
Serialized instance data is submitted using the protocol indicated by the rules stated at 11.2 Submission Options.
The response returned from the submission is applied as follows:
For a success response including a body, when the value of the
replace
attribute on element submission
is "all
", the event xforms-submit-done
is
dispatched, and submit processing concludes with entire containing
document being replaced with the returned body.
For a success response including a body of an XML media type
(as defined by the content type specifiers in [RFC 3023]), when the value of the
replace
attribute on element submission
is "instance
", the response is parsed as XML. An
xforms-link-exception (4.5.2 The
xforms-link-exception Event) occurs if the parse fails. If
the parse succeeds, then all of the internal instance data
of the instance indicated by the instance
attribute setting is replaced with the result. Once
the XML instance data has been replaced, the rebuild, recalculate,
revalidate and refresh operations are performed on the model,
without dispatching events to invoke those four operations.
Submit processing then concludes after dispatching
xforms-submit-done
.
For a success response including a body of a non-XML media type
(i.e. with a content type not matching any of the specifiers
in [RFC 3023]), when the value
of the replace
attribute on element
submission
is "instance
", nothing in the
document is replaced and submit processing concludes after
dispatching xforms-submit-error
.
For a success response including a body, when the value of the
replace
attribute on element submission
is "none
", submit processing concludes after
dispatching xforms-submit-done
.
For a success response not including a body, submit processing
concludes after dispatching xforms-submit-done
.
Behaviors of other possible values for attribute
replace
are not defined in this specification.
For an error response nothing in the document is replaced, and
submit processing concludes after dispatching
xforms-submit-error
.
The XForms Model specifies a submission
element
containing the following attributes that affect serialization and
submission. This section summarizes the behaviors for the allowable
values of these attributes, and introduces the following sections
that define the behavior for serialization and submission. (See
3.3.3 The submission
Element for additional submission
attributes
that affect serialization.)
action
(xsd:anyURI)
method
(xsd:string, enumerated below)
For the URI scheme of action
, XForms normatively
defines a binding to HTTP/1.1 [RFC
2616].
Note:
Other bindings, in particular to the URI scheme "mailto:" may, and the schemes "https:" and "file:" should, be supported. Bindings to these schemes are not normatively defined in XForms. Implementations that choose to provide a binding to these schemes should pay particular attention to privacy and security concerns. Within the "http:" and "https:" schemes, form creators are encouraged to follow the finding of the W3C Technical Architecture Group on when to use the GET method: [TAG Finding 7]
The method
attribute determines the serialization
format, and the URI scheme used in the action
attribute determines the submit protocol, according to the
following table:
URI scheme | method |
Serialization | Submission |
---|---|---|---|
http https mailto | "post" | application/xml |
HTTP POST or equivalent |
http https file | "get" |
application/x-www-form-urlencoded |
HTTP GET or equivalent |
http https file | "put" | application/xml |
HTTP PUT or equivalent |
http https mailto | "multipart-post" | multipart/related |
HTTP POST or equivalent |
http https mailto | "form-data-post" | multipart/form-data |
HTTP POST or equivalent |
http https mailto | "urlencoded-post" (Deprecated) |
application/x-www-form-urlencoded |
HTTP POST or equivalent |
(any) | any other QNAME with no prefix | N/A | N/A |
(any) | any QNAME with a prefix | implementation-defined | implementation-defined |
Note:
Foreign-namespaced attributes are allowed on element
submission
, but no behavior is defined by XForms
1.0.
This format permits the expression of the instance data as XML that is straightforward to process with off-the-shelf XML processing tools. In addition, this format is capable of submission of binary content.
The steps for serialization are as follows:
An XML document is produced following the rules of the XML
output method defined in [XSLT 1.0] section
16 and 16.1, using the values supplied as attributes of the
submission
element.
Handling of namespace nodes: The default behavior is that every
namespace node is serialized according to the rules of the XML
output method, so that at least one namespace declaration appears
in the serialized XML for each in-scope namespace. Additional
inherited namespaces are declared on the root element of the
serialized XML. If, however, attribute
includenamespaceprefixes
on element
submission
is present, then all namespace declarations
not visibly utilized in the instance data (as defined in [Exc-C14N]) and the default namespace if it is
empty are excluded from the root element serialization, unless the
corresponding namespace prefix is listed in the
includenamespaceprefixes
attribute. The special value
#default
represents the default namespace.
Mediatype: By default, the mediatype of the serialized XML
instance is application/xml
, but can be changed to a
compatible type using element submission
attribute
mediatype
. Authors should ensure that the type
specified is compatible with application/xml
.
This format is intended for integration of XForms into
environments that involve large amounts of binary data where the
inclusion of the data as xsd:base64Binary
or
xsd:hexBinary
is undesirable.
In this format, XML instance data is serialized as one part of
the [RFC 2387]
multipart/related
message, using the rules as
described in 11.3 Serialization as
application/xml. Binary content from
xsd:anyURI
instance nodes populated by the
upload
(see 8.1.6 The upload
Element) control is serialized in separate parts of the
[RFC 2387]
multipart/related
message.
This format follows the rules of multipart/related
MIME data streams for in [RFC 2387],
with specific requirements of this serialization listed below:
multipart/related
message header requirements:
Must contain a type
parameter of the mediatype of
the serialized XML instance.
Must contain a start
parameter referring to the
Content-ID first body part (root).
First body part (root) requirements:
Must have Content-Type
parameter of the type
specified by the submission
mediatype
attribute.
Content is serialized by the rules at 11.3 Serialization as application/xml.
Subsequent part requirements:
One part for each node with a datatype of
xsd:anyURI
populated by upload
with:
A Content-Type
header that represents the type of
the attachment if known, otherwise
application/octet-stream
.
A Content-Transfer-Encoding
header.
A Content-ID
header whose value matches the URI in
the associated instance data node.
The binary content associated with the URI, serialized according
to the Content-Transfer-Encoding
heading.
Content-Type: multipart/related; boundary=f93dcbA3; type=application/xml; start="<980119.X53GGT@example.com>" Content-Length: xxx --f93dcbA3 Content-Type: application/xml; charset=UTF-8 Content-ID: <980119.X53GGT@example.com> <?xml version="1.0"?> <uploadDocument> <title>My Proposal</title> <author>E. X. Ample</author> <summary>A proposal for a new project.</summary> <notes image="cid:980119.X17AXM@example.com">(see handwritten region)</notes> <keywords>project proposal funding</keywords> <readonly>false</readonly> <filename>image.png</filename> <content>cid:980119.X25MNC@example.com</content> </uploadDocument> --f93dcbA3 Content-Type: image/png Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary Content-ID: <980119.X25MNC@example.com> ...Binary data here... --f93dcbA3 Content-Type: image/png Content-Transfer-Encoding: binary Content-ID: <980119.X17AXM@example.com> ...Binary data here... --f93dcbA3--
This format is for legacy compatibility to permit the use of XForms clients with [RFC 2388] servers. This method is suitable for the persistence of binary content. Contextual path information, attribute values, namespaces and namespace prefixes are not preserved. As a result, different elements might serialize to the same name.
Note:
Existing HTML user agents fail to encode special characters
(such as double quotes) and non-ASCII characters in the
Content-Disposition: form-data
name
and
filename
parameters. Since this serialization method
is supported for legacy applications only, new applications should
use application/xml
or
multipart/related
.
This format follows the rules for
multipart/form-data
MIME data streams in [RFC 2388], with specific requirements of this
serialization listed below:
Each element node is visited in document order.
Each element that has exactly one text node child is selected for inclusion.
Element nodes selected for inclusion are as encoded as
Content-Disposition: form-data
MIME parts as defined
in [RFC 2387], with the
name
parameter being the element local name.
Element nodes of any datatype populated by upload
are serialized as the specified content and additionally have a
Content-Disposition
filename
parameter,
if available.
The Content-Type
must be text/plain
except for xsd:base64Binary
,
xsd:hexBinary
, and derived types, in which case the
header represents the media type of the attachment if known,
otherwise application/octet-stream
. If a character set
is applicable, the Content-Type
may have a
charset
parameter.
Example:
Content-Type: multipart/form-data; boundary=AaB03x Content-Length: xxx --AaB03x Content-Disposition: form-data; name="document"; filename="b.txt" Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 This is a file. It has two lines. --AaB03x Content-Disposition: form-data; name="title" A File --AaB03x Content-Disposition: form-data; name="summary" This is my file file test --AaB03x--
This serialization format is designed to allow the use of a form to gather the data necessary to produce a URI that names a resource and for accessing that resource with an HTTP GET operation.
This format represents an extension of the [XHTML 1.0] form content type
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
with specific rules
for encoding non-ASCII and reserved characters.
This format is not suitable for the persistence of binary content. Therefore, it is recommended that forms capable of containing binary content use another serialization method.
The steps for serialization are as follows:
Each element node is visited in document order. Each element that has one text node child is selected for inclusion. Note that attribute information is not preserved.
Element nodes selected for inclusion are encoded as
EltName=value
, where =
is a literal
character, EltName
represents the element local name,
and value
represents the contents of the text node.
The separator character {sep} from the separator
attribute on submission
is used between pairs of
encoded name/value pairs, e.g.
EltName1=value1{sep}EltName2=value2{sep}EltName3=value3
.
Note that contextual path information is not preserved, nor are
namespaces or namespace prefixes. As a result, different elements
might serialize to the same name.
The encoding of EltName
and value
are
as follows: space characters are replaced by +
, and
then non-ASCII and reserved characters (as defined by [RFC 2396] as amended by subsequent documents
in the IETF track) are escaped by replacing the character with one
or more octets of the UTF-8 representation of the character, with
each octet in turn replaced by %HH
, where
HH
represents the uppercase hexadecimal notation for
the octet value and %
is a literal character. Line
breaks are represented as "CR LF" pairs (i.e.,
%0D%0A
).
All such encodings are concatenated, maintaining document order.
Example:
GivenName=Ren%C3%A9
This format consists of simple name-value pairs.
<PersonName title="Mr"> <GivenName>René</GivenName> </PersonName>
Here is the instance data for the above example. Note that very little of the data is preserved. Authors desiring greater data integrity should select a different serialization format.
These submit methods represent HTTP POST or the equivalent concept (such as a mail message). The serialized form data is delivered as the message body.
This submit method represents HTTP PUT or the equivalent concept (such as writing to a local file). The serialized form data is delivered as the message body.
This submit method represents HTTP GET or the equivalent concept. The serialized form data is delivered as part of the URI that is requested during the submit process.
This method is not suitable for submission of forms that are intended to change state or cause other actions to take place at the server. See [RFC 2616] for recommended uses of HTTP GET.
The URI is constructed as follows:
The submit URI from the action
attribute is
examined. If it does not already contain a ?
(question
mark) character, one is appended. If it does already contain a
question mark character, then a separator character from the
attribute separator
is appended.
The serialized form data is appended to the URI.
No message body is sent with the request.
The XForms specification is intended for implementation on hardware platforms of all sizes, from tiny hand-held devices to high-powered servers. For this reason, a separate document is being developed to describe a conformance profile of XForms that can be processed with fewer resources.
This conformance level is suitable for more powerful forms
processing, such as might be found on a standard desktop browser or
a distributed XForms Processor involving server-side components.
XForms Full implementations must return "full
"
from the property
method (defined at 7.9.1 The property() Function ) called
with the "conformance-level
" parameter string.
All XForms Processors must conform to the following specifications, except as qualified below:
[XPath 1.0] Implementing all features.
All XForms Processors must fully support the following XForms modules: Core; MustUnderstand; Form Controls; Group; Switch; Repeat; and Action.
All XForms Processors must also support: the XForms Processing
Model and all events listed at 4 Processing
Model; the http
scheme for processing
xsd:anyURI; all serialization methods defined at 11 Submit.
A host language may introduce additional conformance requirements.
XForms Full Processors must implement all required features defined in this specification.
All XForms Containing Documents must conform to the following specifications, except as qualified below:
XForms elements are typically inserted into a containing
document in multiple places. The root element for each individual
fragment must be model
, a form control,
group
, repeat
, or switch
.
Individual XForms fragments must be schema-valid against the Schema
for XForms (A Schema for XForms).
A host language may introduce additional conformance requirements.
All XForms Full conforming documents must conform to all required portions of this specification.
[Definition: A "binding" connects an instance data node to a form control or to a model item constraint by using a binding expression as a locater.]
[Definition: An [XPath 1.0] expression used in a binding.]
[Definition: An [XPath 1.0] expression used in a binding that declares a model item property.]
[Definition: An [XPath 1.0] expression used in binding a form control to the instance, or to specify the node or node-set for operation by an action.]
[Definition: An [XPath 1.0] expression used by model item properties such as relevant and calculate to include dynamic functionality in XForms.]
[Definition: A specific document, for example an XHTML document, in which one or more <model> elements are found.]
[Definition: From XML Schema [XML Schema part 2]: A 3-tuple, consisting of a) a set of distinct values, called its value space, b) a set of lexical representations, called its lexical space, and c) a set of facets that characterize properties of the value space, individual values or lexical items.]
[Definition: From XML Schema [XML Schema part 2]: A single defining aspect of a value space. Generally speaking, each facet characterizes a value space along independent axes or dimensions.]
[Definition: When a UI Single-Node Binding attribute selects a node-set of size > 1, the first node in the node-set is used.]
[Definition: An XForms user interface control that serves as a point of user interaction.]
[Definition: An XML vocabulary, such as XHTML, into which XForms is embedded.]
[Definition: An internal tree representation of the values and state of all the instance data nodes associated with a particular form.]
[Definition: An [XPath 1.0] node from the instance data.]
[Definition: From XML Schema [XML Schema part 2]: A lexical space is the set of valid literals for a datatype.]
[Definition: An instance data node with associated constraints.]
[Definition: An XForms-specific annotation to an instance data node.]
[Definition: A restriction, applied to form data, based on XML Schema datatypes.]
[Definition: From XML Schema [XML Schema part 2]: A set of values for a given datatype. Each value in the value space of a datatype is denoted by one or more literals in its lexical space.]
[Definition: The non-visible definition of an XML form as specified by XForms. The XForms Model defines the individual model items and constraints and other run-time aspects of XForms.]
[Definition: A software application or program that implements and conforms to the XForms specification.]
The normative XML Schema for XForms is located at http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/Forms/2002/XForms-Schema.xsd.
This XML Schema for XML Events is referenced by the XML Schema for XForms, and located at http://www.w3.org/TR/2003/REC-xml-events-20031014/#a_schema_attribs.
P3P privacy policies may be associated with any forms transmitted over HTTP that have URIs associated with them. In the future, mechanisms may be specified for associating P3P policies with content transmitted over other protocols.
P3P allows for policies to be associated with an individual URI or a set of URIs. By associating a separate policy with each URI a site can declare a very precise policy that addresses exactly what data is collected with a particular HTTP request and how that data will be used. However, site management is substantially easier for many sites if they declare a single policy that covers many URIs, or even their entire Web presence.
The P3P specification specifies several methods for referencing a P3P policy reference file, which in turn associates P3P policies with URIs and cookies. XForms can be P3P enabled using any of the methods that are appropriate for the Web site in which they are embedded. Some special considerations regarding forms are addressed in the P3P Specification. [P3P 1.0]
Different P3P policies may be applied to the representation of a form embedded in a containing document to that which is associated with the data submitted via that form. If the form representation is served from a different server than the form is submitted to, it is likely that separate P3P policy reference files and policies will be needed. Typically the form representation causes only clickstream data (as defined in [P3P 1.0] section 5.6.4) to be transferred, while a form submission causes much more data to be transferred.
XForms Processors are free (and encouraged) to skip or optimize any steps in this algorithm, as long as the end result is the same. The XForms recalculation algorithm considers model items and model item properties to be vertices in a directed graph. Edges between the vertices represent computational dependencies between vertices.
Following is the default handling for a recalculate
action. Action recalculate
is defined in 10.1.4 The recalculate
Element.
A master dependency directed graph is created as detailed in D.1 Details on Creating the Master Dependency Directed Graph.
To provide consistent behavior, implementations must reduce the number of vertices to be processed by computing a pertinent dependency subgraph consisting only of vertices and edges that are reachable from nodes that require recomputation. This is detailed in D.2 Details on Creating the Pertinent Dependency Subgraph. Note that on a first recomputation (such as on form load), the pertinent dependency subgraph will be the same as the master dependency directed graph.
A topological sort is performed on the vertices of the pertinent dependency subgraph, resulting in an order of evaluation in which each vertex is evaluated only after those vertices on which it depends and before all vertices which depend on it. The topological sort algorithm is discussed at [Algorithms].
The recalculate
process completes.
The master dependency directed graph can be considered an array with one record for each vertex, each having the following fields:
InstanceNode: a reference to the associated instance data node
type: indicates the aspect of the instance node represented by the vertex (the text content or a model item property such as readOnly or required)
depList: a list of vertices that refer to this vertex
in-degree: the number of vertices on which this vertex depends
visited: a flag used to ensure vertices are not added to a subgraph multiple times
index: an association between vertices in the master dependency directed graph and a subgraph
The depList
for each vertex is assigned to be the
referenced XML nodes of a given instance node, which are obtained
by parsing the computed expression in the node (e.g., the
calculate, relevant, readonly, or required property). Any
expression violating any Binding Expression Constraint causes an
exception (4.5.4 The
xforms-compute-exception Event), terminating the
recalculate
process.
The depList
for a vertex v
is assigned
to be the vertices other than v
whose computational
expressions reference v
(described below). Vertex
v
is excluded from its own depList
to
allow self-references to occur without causing a circular reference
exception.
A computational expression appearing in a calculate
attribute controls the text content (value) of one or more instance
nodes. A vertex exists for each instance node to represent the
expression in the context of the node. Likewise, computational
expressions for model item properties such as readOnly
and required
are applied to one or more instance
nodes, and vertices are created to represent such expressions in
the context of each applicable node. The computational expression
of each vertex must be examined to determine the XML nodes to which
it refers. Any expression violating any Binding Expression
Constraint causes an exception (4.5.4 The xforms-compute-exception
Event), terminating the recalculate
process. A
computation expression refers to a vertex v
if a
subexpression indicates the InstanceNode for v
and
v
represents the instance node text content (its
value). In this version of XForms, model item properties such as
readOnly
and required
cannot be
referenced in an expression.
If all calculations must be performed, which is the case on form load, then the pertinent dependency subgraph is simply a duplicate of the master dependency directed graph. If the recalculation algorithm is invoked with a list of changed instance data nodes since the last recalculation, then the pertinent dependency subgraph is obtained by exploring the paths of edges and vertices in the computational dependency directed graph that are reachable from each vertex in the change list. The method of path exploration can be depth first search, a suitable version of which appears in the pseudo-code below.
This algorithm creates a pertinent dependency subgraph
S
from a list of changed instance data nodes
L<sub>c</sub>
. Variables such as
v
and w
represent vertices in the master
dependency directed graph. The same variables ending with
S
indicate vertices in the pertinent dependency
subgraph S
.
// Use depth-first search to explore master digraph subtrees rooted at // each changed vertex. A 'visited' flag is used to stop exploration // at the boundaries of previously explored subtrees (because subtrees // can overlap in directed graphs). for each vertex r in Lc if r is not visited { Push the pair (NIL, r) onto a stack while the stack is not empty { (v, w) = pop dependency pair from stack if w is not visited { Set the visited flag of w to true Create a vertex wS in S to represent w Set the index of w equal to the array location of wS Set the index of wS equal to the array location of w Set the InstanceNode of wS equal to the InstanceNode of w Set the type of wS equal to the type of w For each dependency node x of w Push the pair (w, x) onto the stack } else Obtain wS from index of w if v is not NIL { Obtain vS from index of v Add dependency node for wS to vS Increment inDegree of wS } } } // Now clear the visited flags set in the loop above for each vertex vS in S { Obtain v from index of vS Assign false to the visited flag of v }
Note that the number of vertices and dependency nodes in the
pertinent dependency subgraph is not known beforehand, but a method
such as array doubling (see [DDJ-ArrayDoubling]) can be used to ensure that
building the subgraph is performed in time linear in the size of
S
.
The following steps process vertices, resulting in a recalculated form:
A vertex with inDegree of 0 is selected for evaluation and removed from the pertinent dependency subgraph. In the case where more than one vertex has inDegree zero, no particular ordering is specified. If the pertinent dependency subgraph contains vertices, but none have an inDegree of 0, then the calculation structure of the form has a loop, and an exception (4.5.4 The xforms-compute-exception Event) must be thrown, terminating processing.
If the vertex corresponds to a computed item, computed expressions are evaluated as follows:
calculate
: If the value of the model item changes,
the corresponding instance data is updated and the dirty flag is
set.
relevant
, readOnly
,
required
, constraint
: If any or all of
these computed properties change, the new settings are immediately
placed into effect for associated form controls.
For each vertex in the depList
of the removed
vertex, decrement the inDegree by 1.
If no vertices remain in the pertinent dependency subgraph, then the calculation has successfully completed. Otherwise, repeat this sequence from step 1.
For example, consider six vertices a
,
b
, v
, w
, x
, and
y
. Let a
and b
represent the
text content of instance nodes that will be set by a binding from
user input controls. Let v
and w
be
vertices representing the calculated value and the validity
property of a third instance node c
. These vertices
would result from a bind
element B
with
calculate
and constraint
attributes and a
nodeset
attribute that indicates c
.
Suppose that the value of c
is the product of
a
and b
and that the value is only valid
if it does not exceed 100. Likewise, suppose x
and
y
are vertices representing the calculated value and
the validity property of a fourth instance node d
. Let
the value of d
be the sum of a
and
b
, and let d
be valid if the value does
not exceed 20. The figure below depicts the dependency digraph for
this example.
Vertices a
and b
have edges leading to
v
and x
because these vertices represent
the calculate expressions of c
and d
,
which reference a
and b
to compute their
product and sum, respectively. Similarly, v
and
x
have directed edges to w
and
y
, respectively, because w
and
y
represent the constraint
expressions of
c
and d
, which reference the values of
c
and d
to compare them with boundary
values.
If a
and b
are initially equal to 10,
and the user changes a
to 11, then it is necessary to
first recalculate v
(the value of c
) then
recalculate w
(the validity property of the value of
c
). Likewise, x
(the value of
d
) must be recalculated before recalculating
y
(the validity property of the value of
d
). In both cases, the validity of the value does not
change to false
until after the new product and sum
are computed based on the change to a
. However, there
are no interdependencies between v
and x
,
so the product and sum could be computed in either order.
The pertinent subgraph excludes b
and only vertex
a
has in-degree of zero. The vertex a
is
processed first. It is not a computed vertex, so no recalculation
occurs on a
, but its removal causes v
and
x
to have in-degree zero. Vertex v
is
processed second. Its value changes to 121, and its removal drops
the in-degree of vertex w
to zero. Vertex
x
is processed next, changing value to 21. When
x
is removed, its neighbor y
drops to
in-degree zero. The fourth and fifth iterations of this process
recalculate the validity of w
and y
, both
of which change to false.
The attribute inputmode
provides a hint to
the user agent to select an appropriate input mode for the text
input expected in an associated form control. The input mode may be
a keyboard configuration, an input method editor (also called front
end processor) or any other setting affecting input on the
device(s) used.
Using inputmode
, the author can give hints to the
agent that make form input easier for the user. Authors should
provide inputmode
attributes wherever possible, making
sure that the values used cover a wide range of devices.
inputmode
Attribute Value SyntaxThe value of the inputmode
attribute is a white
space separated list of tokens. Tokens are either sequences of
alphabetic letters or absolute URIs. The later can be distinguished
from the former by noting that absolute URIs contain a ':'. Tokens
are case-sensitive. All the tokens consisting of alphabetic letters
only are defined in this specification, in E.3 List of Tokens (or a successor of
this specification).
This specification does not define any URIs for use as tokens, but allows others to define such URIs for extensibility. This may become necessary for devices with input modes that cannot be covered by the tokens provided here. The URI should dereference to a human-readable description of the input mode associated with the use of the URI as a token. This description should describe the input mode indicated by this token, and whether and how this token modifies other tokens or is modified by other tokens.
Upon entering an empty form control with an
inputmode
attribute, the user agent should select the
input mode indicated by the inputmode
attribute value.
User agents should not use the inputmode
attribute to
set the input mode when entering a form control with text already
present. To set the appropriate input mode when entering a form
control that already contains text, user agents should rely on
platform-specific conventions.
User agents should make available all the input modes which are supported by the (operating) system/device(s) they run on/have access to, and which are installed for regular use by the user. This is typically only a small subset of the input modes that can be described with the tokens defined here.
Note:
Additional guidelines for user agent implementation are found at [UAAG 1.0].
The following simple algorithm is used to define how user agents
match the values of an inputmode
attribute to the
input modes they can provide. This algorithm does not have to be
implemented directly; user agents just have to behave as if they
used it. The algorithm is not designed to produce "obvious" or
"desirable" results for every possible combination of tokens, but
to produce correct behavior for frequent token combinations and
predictable behavior in all cases.
First, each of the input modes available is represented by one or more lists of tokens. An input mode may correspond to more than one list of tokens; as an example, on a system set up for a Greek user, both "greek upperCase" and "user upperCase" would correspond to the same input mode. No two lists will be the same.
Second, the inputmode
attribute is scanned from
front to back. For each token t in the
inputmode
attribute, if in the remaining list of
tokens representing available input modes there is any list of
tokens that contains t, then all lists of tokens
representing available input modes that do not contain t
are removed. If there is no remaining list of tokens that contains
t, then t is ignored.
Third, if one or more lists of tokens are left, and they all correspond to the same input mode, then this input mode is chosen. If no list is left (meaning that there was none at the start) or if the remaining lists correspond to more than one input mode, then no input mode is chosen.
Example: Assume the list of lists of tokens representing the
available input modes is: {"cyrillic upperCase", "cyrillic
lowerCase", "cyrillic", "latin", "user upperCase", "user
lowerCase"}, then the following inputmode
values
select the following input modes: "cyrillic title" selects
"cyrillic", "cyrillic lowerCase" selects "cyrillic lowerCase",
"lowerCase cyrillic" selects "cyrillic lowerCase", "latin
upperCase" selects "latin", but "upperCase latin" does select
"cyrillic upperCase" or "user upperCase" if they correspond to the
same input mode, and does not select any input mode if "cyrillic
upperCase" and "user upperCase" do not correspond to the same input
mode.
Tokens defined in this specification are separated into two
categories: Script tokens and modifiers. In
inputmode
attributes, script tokens should always be
listed before modifiers.
Script tokens provide a general indication the set of characters that is covered by an input mode. In most cases, script tokens correspond directly to [Unicode Scripts]. Some tokens correspond to the block names in Java class java.lang.Character.UnicodeBlock ([Java Unicode Blocks]) or Unicode Block names. However, this neither means that an input mode has to allow input for all the characters in the script or block, nor that an input mode is limited to only characters from that specific script. As an example, a "latin" keyboard doesn't cover all the characters in the Latin script, and includes punctuation which is not assigned to the Latin script. The version of the Unicode Standard that these script names are taken from is 3.2.
Input Mode Token | Comments |
---|---|
arabic | Unicode script name |
armenian | Unicode script name |
bengali | Unicode script name |
bopomofo | Unicode script name |
braille | used to input braille patterns (not to indicate a braille input device) |
buhid | Unicode script name |
canadianAboriginal | Unicode script name |
cherokee | Unicode script name |
cyrillic | Unicode script name |
deseret | Unicode script name |
devanagari | Unicode script name |
ethiopic | Unicode script name |
georgian | Unicode script name |
greek | Unicode script name |
gothic | Unicode script name |
gujarati | Unicode script name |
gurmukhi | Unicode script name |
han | Unicode script name |
hangul | Unicode script name |
hanja | Subset of 'han' used in writing Korean |
hanunoo | Unicode script name |
hebrew | Unicode script name |
hiragana | Unicode script name (may include other Japanese scripts produced by conversion from hiragana) |
ipa | International Phonetic Alphabet |
kanji | Subset of 'han' used in writing Japanese |
kannada | Unicode script name |
katakana | Unicode script name (full-width, not half-width) |
khmer | Unicode script name |
lao | Unicode script name |
latin | Unicode script name |
malayalam | Unicode script name |
math | mathematical symbols and related characters |
mongolian | Unicode script name |
myanmar | Unicode script name |
ogham | Unicode script name |
oldItalic | Unicode script name |
oriya | Unicode script name |
runic | Unicode script name |
simplifiedHanzi | Subset of 'han' used in writing Simplified Chinese |
sinhala | Unicode script name |
syriac | Unicode script name |
tagalog | Unicode script name |
tagbanwa | Unicode script name |
tamil | Unicode script name |
telugu | Unicode script name |
thaana | Unicode script name |
thai | Unicode script name |
tibetan | Unicode script name |
traditionalHanzi | Subset of 'han' used in writing Traditional Chinese |
user | Special value denoting the 'native' input of the user (e.g. to input her name or text in her native language). |
yi | Unicode script name |
Modifier tokens can be added to the scripts they apply in order to more closely specify the kind of characters expected in the form control. Traditional PC keyboards do not need most modifier tokens (indeed, users on such devices would be quite confused if the software decided to change case on its own; CAPS lock for upperCase may be an exception). However, modifier tokens can be very helpful to set input modes for small devices.
Input Mode Token | Comments |
---|---|
lowerCase | lowercase (for bicameral scripts) |
upperCase | uppercase (for bicameral scripts) |
titleCase | title case (for bicameral scripts): words start with an upper case letter |
startUpper | start input with one uppercase letter, then continue with lowercase letters |
digits | digits of a particular script (e.g. inputmode='thai digits') |
symbols | symbols, punctuation (suitable for a particular script) |
predictOn | text prediction switched on (e.g. for running text) |
predictOff | text prediction switched off (e.g. for passwords) |
halfWidth | half-width compatibility forms (e.g. Katakana; deprecated) |
User agents may use information available in an XML Schema
pattern facet to set the input mode. Note that a pattern facet is a
hard restriction on the lexical value of an instance data node, and
can specify different restrictions for different parts of the data
item. Attribute inputmode
is a soft hint about the
kinds of characters that the user may most probably start to input
into the form control. Attribute inputmode
is provided
in addition to pattern facets for the following reasons:
The set of allowable characters specified in a pattern may be so
wide that it is not possible to deduce a reasonable input mode
setting. Nevertheless, there frequently is a kind of characters
that will be input by the user with high probability. In such a
case, inputmode
allows to set the input mode for the
user's convenience.
In some cases, it would be possible to derive the input mode
setting from the pattern because the set of characters allowed in
the pattern closely corresponds to a set of characters covered by
an inputmode
attribute value. However, such a
derivation would require a lot of data and calculations on the user
agent.
Small devices may leave the checking of patterns to the server, but will easily be able to switch to those input modes that they support. Being able to make data entry for the user easier is of particular importance on small devices.
This is an example of a form for Japanese address input. It is shown in table form; it will be replaced by actual syntax in a later version of this specification.
Caption: | inputmode |
---|---|
Family name | hiragana |
(in kana) | katakana |
Given name | hiragana |
(in kana) | katakana |
Zip code | latin digits |
Address | hiragana |
(in kana) | katakana |
latin lowerCase | |
Telephone | latin digits |
Comments | user predictOn |
This informative section provides a broad outline of new and existing CSS features needed to style XForms content. A future Recommendation from the CSS Working Group will fully develop the specification of these features.
A CSS pseudo-class is used to select elements for styling based on information that lies outside of the document tree or that cannot be expressed using the other selectors.
Name | Defined in: | Relationship to XForms |
---|---|---|
:enabled &
:disabled |
[CSS3] | Selects any form control bound to a
node with the model item property relevant evaluating
to true or false (respectively). |
:required &
:optional |
TBD | Selects any form control bound to a
node with the model item property required evaluating
to true or false (respectively). |
:valid &
:invalid |
TBD | Selects any form control bound to a node that is currently valid or invalid (respectively), as defined by XForms 1.0. |
:read-only &
:read-write |
TBD | Selects any form control bound to a
node with the model item property readonly evaluating
to true or false (respectively). |
:out-of-range &
:in-range |
TBD | Selects any form control bound to a node that contains a value the form control is not or is capable of rendering, (respectively). |
This list is not exhaustive; other pseudo-classes may be defined.
Pseudo-elements are abstractions about the document tree beyond those specified by the document language. Pseudo-elements do not appear in the DOM; they are used only for purposes of styling.
Name | Defined in: | Relationship to XForms |
---|---|---|
::value |
TBD | Represents the "active" area of a form
control excluding the label; this corresponds in HTML to
input and other form control elements. This
pseudo-element is a child of the form control element, and appears
immediately after the required label element. |
::repeat-item |
TBD | Represents a single item from a
repeating sequence. Its position is as a parent to all the elements
in a single repeating item. Each ::repeat-item is
associated with a particular instance data node, and is affected by
the model item properties (e.g. 'relevant ') found
there, as the related style properties will cascade to the child
elements. |
::repeat-index |
TBD | Represents the current item of a
repeating sequence. Its position is as a parent of all the elements
in the index repeating item (and as a child to the
::repeat-item pseudo-element), thus any style
declarations applying to this pseudo-element override those on the
parent ::repeat-item . |
This list is not exhaustive; other pseudo-elements may be defined.
The following examples show how basic styling can be accomplished on form controls and repeating structures.
@namespace xforms url(http://www.w3.org/2002/xforms); /* Display a red background on all invalid form controls */ *:invalid { background-color:red; } /* Display a red asterisk after all required form controls */ *:required::after { content: "*"; color:red; } /* Do not render non-relevant form controls */ *:disabled { visibility: hidden; } /* The following declarations cause form controls and their labels to align neatly, as if a two-column table were used */ xforms|group { display: table; } xforms|input { display: table-row; } xforms|input > xforms|label { display: table-cell; } xforms|input::value { border: thin black solid; display: table-cell; } /* Display an alert message when appropriate */ *:valid > xforms|alert { display: none; } *:invalid > xforms|alert { display: inline; } /* Display repeat-items with a dashed border */ *::repeat-item { border: dashed; } /* Display a teal highlight behind the current repeat item */ *::repeat-index { background-color: teal; }
This section presents complete XForms examples. These and additional examples are maintained at http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/Forms/2002/Examples.
Schema file payschema.xsd
:
Initial instance file bookmarks.xml
:
The following example shows one possible way of integrating XForms with [SVG 1.1]. Note that the complete set of rules for integrating XForms and SVG are not fully specified at the time this specification was published. Future versions of the XForms, SVG, or other W3C specifications might define more complete rules for integrating XForms and SVG which might not be compatible with the example below.
Note that the example below does not use SVG's
switch
and requiredExtensions
features,
which are commonly used in conjunction with
foreignObject
.
This section summarizes changes since the 14 October 2003 XForms 1.0 Recommendation.
Applied errata available as of publication date.
Updated list of editors and contributors.
This document was produced with the participation of current XForms Working Group participants:
Former Working Group participants:
The XForms Working Group has benefited in its work from the participation of Invited Experts:
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Editor Acknowledgments: Previous versions of this document were edited with assistance from Dave Raggett (until December 2000), Linda Bucsay Welsh (until April 2001), and Josef Dietl (until October 2001). Martin Dürst edited the section on input modes. The first edition of this recommendation was co-edited by Leigh L. Klotz, Jr. and Micah Dubinko.
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Additional Acknowledgments: The editors would like to thank Kai Scheppe, Malte Wedel, and Götz Bock for constructive criticism on early versions of the binding discussion and their contributions to its present content. We thank John Boyer for authoring parts of the XForms events and action handler processing models as well as sections on the recalculation sequence algorithm. Finally, we would like to thank members of the public www-forms@w3.org mailing list for their careful reading of draft versions of this specification and providing constructive suggestions and criticisms.
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Additional Acknowledgments: The Working Group would like to thank the following members of the XML Schema-XForms joint task force: Daniel Austin (chair), David Cleary, Micah Dubinko, Martin Dürst, David Ezell, Leigh Klotz, Noah Mendelsohn, Roland Merrick, and Peter Stark for their assistance in identifying a subset of XML Schema for use in XForms.
This document was encoded in the XMLspec DTD (which has documentation available). The XML sources were transformed using xmlspec.xsl style sheet. The XML Schema portion of the Appendix was rendered into HTML with the xmlverbatim XSLT stylesheet (used with permission). The primary tools used for editing were SoftQuad XMetaL and EMACS with psgml and XAE. The XML was validated using XMLLint (part of the GNOME libxml package) and transformed using XSLTProc—part of the GNOME libxsl package). The multi-file HTML version was produced using the Xalan processor. The HTML versions were also produced at times with the Saxon engine. The editors used the W3C CVS repository and the W3C IRC server for collaborative authoring.