Found 158 results for "forms references"
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Easy Forms with Cloud CMSOne of the many uses of Cloud CMS is as a storage and reporting mechanism for forms. If you’re looking to put a form up onto your web or mobile site, Cloud CMS serves as an excellent option for capturing and storing this information. Fundamentally, Cloud CMS provides the Alpaca forms engine. Alpaca is an open-source JavaScript library for jQuery. It makes it easy to design and insert forms into your sites. Cloud CMS built Alpaca and been working with the broader community to improve it and make
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Cloud CMS Web and Mobile FormsOne of the things that Cloud CMS does really well is forms - specifically, web and mobile forms. If you’ve ever worked with the development of forms before, you know they’re pretty tricky to put together. You typically have back-end code that is responsible for taking a data structure, validating it and writing it to a database. And you also have front-end code which does user-facing data validation that is cosmetically appealing (pretty red boxes) and helpful. You need to think about customizin
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Frameworks / ReactReact Guide and References for connectivity to Cloud CMS Accessing your Cloud CMS content from a React app is a simple process. Below you will find steps and examples for how to get connected and get started building. null null Source Code and Setup The code for this example is available as part of the Gitana SDK, which contains usages of Cloud CMS with many different languages and frameworks. To download, run git clone https://github.com/gitana/sdk.git Navigate to the react/sample directory Pas
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Frameworks / Vue.jsVue.js Guide and References for connectivity to Cloud CMS Accessing your Cloud CMS content from a Vue app is a simple process. Below you will find steps and examples for how to get connected and get started building. null null Source Code and Setup The code for this example is available as part of the Gitana SDK, which contains usages of Cloud CMS with many different languages and frameworks. To download, run git clone https://github.com/gitana/sdk.git Navigate to the vuejs/sample directory Past
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / UI Developers Guide / Contexts / definition-subcontextdefinition-subcontext [ { "evaluator": "context-definition", "condition": true, "config": { "definition-subcontext": { "items": [ { "key": "definition", "title": "Definition", "header": true, "order": 1000, "items": [ { "key": "definition/overview", "title": "Overview", "uri": "{definitionUri}", "order": 1000
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / User Interface Customization / Contexts / definition-subcontextdefinition-subcontext [ { "evaluator": "context-definition", "condition": true, "config": { "definition-subcontext": { "items": [ { "key": "definition", "title": "Definition", "header": true, "order": 1000, "items": [ { "key": "definition/overview", "title": "Overview", "uri": "{definitionUri}", "order": 1000
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Frameworks / PostmanPostman Guide and References for connectivity to Cloud CMS Connecting to Cloud CMS If you want to test out the Cloud CMS API using Postman or another HTTP client, you'll first have to obtain an authentication token First, ensure you have API Keys configured for your project (this is done by default for the sample project). You can find these by going to Manage Project and clicking API Keys in the left hand menu. Next, we will request the token. In Postman, use the 'Basic Auth' type under Authori
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How to get a content definition JSON from the Cloud CMS API?There are a couple of ways to do this. The first is simply use the node GET call and pass in the qname like this: GET /repositories/{repositoryId}/branches/{branchId}/nodes/{qname} http://api.cloudcms.com/docs#!/node/get_repositories_repositoryId_branches_branchId_nodes_nodeId This will give you back the JSON for the definition. Another way is to use this variation: GET /repositories/{repositoryId}/branches/{branchId}/definitions/{qname} http://api.cloudcms.com/docs#!/branch/get_repositories_rep
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Frameworks / cURLcURL Guide and References for connectivity to Cloud CMS Connecting to Cloud CMS From a command prompt, the curl command can be used to execute API calls to Cloud CMS. Connecting to the Cloud CMS API requires API Keys from your Cloud CMS project. This is done by default for the sample project. You can find these by going to Manage Project and clicking API Keys in the left hand menu. Several examples of using curl are available in our Gitana SDK For example, reading a node can be done with the fol
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Getting Started Videos for Cloud CMSWe are very proud of Cloud CMS and encourage you to see for yourself the potential of Cloud CMS (Free Trial). To help you get the most out of the trial and knowledge of some of the features, we have recorded a number of ‘Getting Started’ videos showing some basic features, administration, and a ‘taster’ of some of the more interesting advanced features. (More videos to come for the advanced features). The Getting Started videos: Create a Project Add Users to Projects Upload Content Add Comments
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Is there a programmatic way to add more content to workflows?There is a programmatic way to add more content to workflows once they're in-flight. However, once the workflow is in-flight, the workflow process instance isn't the correct place to add things. Instead, you'd want to add new content to a workflow task. Essentially, a workflow is made up of a series of tasks. When the workflow transitions from one node to another in the workflow model, it instantiates a new task and the task holds the state (and references to documents) for that phase of the wor
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / User Interface / Create/Edit ContentCreate/Edit Content In a Project you can find your content a number of ways: Content (left Nav) - Content listed under Content Types Folders (left Nav) - Folder/File view of the content Search (left Nav for a detailed search or top right for a keyword search) Viewing a Content item Overview': Note: your tenant may be configured such that the options available in the left nav are limited dependent on your Role, eg a non editor Role would not have the editor functions. In the Cloud CMS Trial, this
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Gitana / 4.0 / User Interface / User Interface / Create/Edit ContentCreate/Edit Content In a Project you can find your content a number of ways: Content (left Nav) - Content listed under Content Types Folders (left Nav) - Folder/File view of the content Search (left Nav for a detailed search or top right for a keyword search) Viewing a Content item Overview': Note: your tenant may be configured such that the options available in the left nav are limited dependent on your Role, eg a non editor Role would not have the editor functions. In the Cloud CMS Trial, this
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Alpaca 1.0.3 Released!We’re pleased to announce the release of Alpaca Web Forms 1.0.3 for jQuery, jQuery UI and jQuery Mobile. Alpaca is an open-source project that provides an easy way to render web forms using JSON schema. It consists of a jQuery plugin and provides a nice abstraction so that you can change form layouts, validation logic and presentation with simple changes to JSON. Alpaca provides the web forms capabilities for Cloud CMS - The Cloud Content Management Platform for the Enterprise. This release incl
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Content Entry Forms ExampleCloud CMS lets you easily design and deploy forms for your web applications and content contributors. In this blog entry, we’ll walk through how you can do this within the Cloud CMS user interface. In this example, we’ll create a form that allows editors to create City Guide information. Note: in the Cloud CMS Trial there is a City Guide Content definition which can be used as a starting point or as a reference for this example. Add a Definition The Content Definitions can be found in the Cloud
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / ReportsReports All of the objects that you place into Cloud CMS can be operated against to produce exports that consist of consolidated or reported information. You can use this capability to generate reports in CSV (comma-separated value) format as well as merged PDFs and ZIP archives. Exports are generated from collections of objects. These objects might be collected by hand or they might consist of results sets from a document list, search page or report record set. The Cloud CMS user interface prov
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Gitana / 4.0 / Data Engine / Nodes / ReportsReports All of the objects that you place into Cloud CMS can be operated against to produce exports that consist of consolidated or reported information. You can use this capability to generate reports in CSV (comma-separated value) format as well as merged PDFs and ZIP archives. Exports are generated from collections of objects. These objects might be collected by hand or they might consist of results sets from a document list, search page or report record set. The Cloud CMS user interface prov
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Application Server / Tags / @form@form A form can be rendered from Cloud CMS by identifying the definition and form key. Forms are rendered on the client-side using Alpaca Forms. For a working example, see: https://github.com/gitana/sdk/tree/master/app-server/appserver-form-sample Parameters parameter required description definition yes the type definition QName form yes the form key list no the data list to populate successUrl no the URL to redirect to upon success failureUrl no the URL to redirect to upon failure formId no ov
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Gitana / 4.0 / Developers / Application Server / Tags / @form@form A form can be rendered from Cloud CMS by identifying the definition and form key. Forms are rendered on the client-side using Alpaca Forms. For a working example, see: https://github.com/gitana/sdk/tree/master/app-server/appserver-form-sample Parameters parameter required description definition yes the type definition QName form yes the form key list no the data list to populate successUrl no the URL to redirect to upon success failureUrl no the URL to redirect to upon failure formId no ov
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / User Interface / Security / Add a User to a ProjectAdd a User to a Project Option 1: Create User in the Tenant At Platform level, select 'Member' (left nav) and '+Create User' - Enter the values on the forms and 'Save'. Result: User is now created. Note: The new user will not be able to see any projects when they login the new user will be seen in the Tenant members list and will be available to be added as an 'existing user' to any project Second Step is to add the user to a Project Select Members (left Nav) -> add existing user. - select the u
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Gitana / 4.0 / User Interface / Security / Add a User to a ProjectAdd a User to a Project Option 1: Create User in the Tenant At Platform level, select 'Member' (left nav) and '+Create User' - Enter the values on the forms and 'Save'. Result: User is now created. Note: The new user will not be able to see any projects when they login the new user will be seen in the Tenant members list and will be available to be added as an 'existing user' to any project Second Step is to add the user to a Project Select Members (left Nav) -> add existing user. - select the u
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Gitana / 4.0 / Forms / API / CallbacksCallbacks Alpaca provides several places where you can hook in callbacks. Events - events are raised when the user interacts with fields. You can register callbacks to handle these events, adjust field state or other operations. Observables - each field maintains an observable that you can subscribe to. Subscribing to an observable means that you're listening for changes to its value. You can also use observables to interrogate and find values of fields within namespaces. This lets you find valu
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Gitana / 4.0 / Forms / API / OrderingOrdering The default rendering engine that Alpaca utilizes will render your fields in the order that they are described within your schema. {% raw %} {% endraw %} Use the order option to specify rendering order The precise order of properties can be configured using the order option. {% raw %} {% endraw %} Use a Template to layout fields See Templates for more information on using custom templates to take full control over the layout of your forms.
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Gitana / 3.2 / Guide / Guide / Overview_page Access Policies Actions Antivirus Scanning API API Keys Applications Application Server Attachments Auditing Authentication Binary Files Branches Bulk Import Command Line Conditions Content Modeling Cookbooks Deployment Docker Features Find Forms General GraphQL Integrations Multifactor Authentication Modules Narration Optical Character Recognition Platform Policies Projects Publishing Query Recognition Releases Reports Rules Scripting Search Security Single Sign On (SSO) Supported Stacks
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Gitana / 4.0 / Getting Started / Working with Content / OverviewWorking with Content You can put any kind of content into Cloud CMS. Things like desktop files (Word documents, PDF files, images, audio files and video) are no problem. However, the real power of Cloud CMS begins when you begin to model content type definitions and features to wrap around that content. A content type is a type of thing, such as an Article or a Press Release. You define content types in the same way that you might define a word in the dictionary. You give it a name and then you
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