Form Elements and Form Development Cycle, 12/04/08
Check this out:This handy little state drop-down element and this country drop-down element will save you a great deal of typing. (Warning: These links open in new browser windows.)

You are free to use these form elements in Dreamweaver, whenever you need to, especially in your final assignment, due NLT 4:30, Friday, December 12, delivered to Gail Wessell, Smith 121. Be sure to sign the roster when handing in Assignments 1, 2, and 3 as a package.
Thinking about how to create a form is half the battle in designing an interactive survey for the Web.
The Form Development Cycle tutorial (opens in a new window) will help you to understand the 8-part form development cycle that will make Assignment Three much easier for you as you go about designing your on-line survey. I highly recommend that you step through the tutorial before too much longer.Note that you can save yourself much time and misery if you plan carefully. This assignment is a perfect example of how to use paper and pen (low fidelity prototyping) literally to sketch your plan and its phased implementation. This approach to form design is iterative. You design, implement, test, redesign, reimplement, and retest. Work slowly, carefully, and in small increments, just as we are working in class on understanding the various form elements.
If you have questions, just e-mail me at wbuchholz@bentley.edu. Feel free to comment on this announcement, or if you want to e-mail it, click on the little mail icon directly below. Note also that each announcement has a permanent link, available through the announcement title and posting date.
Labels: check boxes, Dreamweaver, Form Development Cycle, form elements, Form Elements Accessibility Guide, interactive form, on-line survey, radio buttons, survey
posted by WJB at
Thursday, December 04, 2008
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