rest/forms-brainstorming: Difference between revisions

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* You get back a response, which might be an error message about a  
* You get back a response, which might be an error message about a  
parameter problem, or might be a respresentation of the "answer".
parameter problem, or might be a respresentation of the "answer".
[OlaBerg] says: This is exactly what I do, and it works great! In fact, I
use it both for POST-API and GET-API. A set of forms defines a REST-ful
API.


== See Also ==
== See Also ==

Revision as of 14:49, 9 October 2006

Forms Brainstorming

This page collects ideas from forms-examples how to best encode form data into a microformat

Proposal A: DETH - Dictionaries Encoding/Transmitting HTML

Rules (Strawman)

  1. Only use XHTML Basic Forms Module
  2. Must use action with appropriate URI (no scripts)
  3. Recommend: use a label with every input
  4. Make the for of the label match the id of input
  5. Group label with input using
  6. Always place submit and reset outside grouping

Questions for further research

  1. How to specify whether a field is optional or required?
    1. Suggestion: the label contains a * ?

Patterns

Anchor Design Pattern

<a class="deth" href="http//somesite.com/prog/adduser">label</a>

Forms Design Pattern

<form class="deth" action="http://somesite.com/users" method="post">
 <dl>
 <dt><label for="firstname">First name:</label></dt>
  <dd><input type="text" id="firstname" />
</dd><dt>
   <label for="lastname">Last name:</label></dt>
  <dd><input type="text" id="lastname" />
</dd><dt>Sex</dt>
  <dd><input type="radio" name="sex" value="male">Male</input>
  <input type="radio" name="sex" value="female">Female</input>
</dd><dt>Travel</dt>
  <dd>  <input type="checkbox" name="travel" value="car">Car</input>
  <input type="checkbox" name="travel" value="bike">Bicycle</input>
</dd><dt>
 <label for="age">Age:</dt>
  <dd>
 <select>
   <option val=0>< 18</option>
   <option val=18>18-64</option>
   <option val=65>65+</option>
</select>
</dd><dt>
 <label for="description">Description:</label></dt>
  <dd><textarea id="description">Default text</textarea>
</dd>
</dl>
<input type="submit" value="Send" />
<input type="reset" />
</form>

Sample Python Binding

order=[
 "firstname","lastname","sex",'"travel", "age","description"
]
dict={
 "@@tag":"form",
   "@action":"http://somesite.com/users/",
   "@class":"deth",
   "@enctype":"application/x-www-form-urlencoded",
   "@method":"post",
 "@@order":order,
 "firstname":"First name:",
 "lastname":"Last name:",
 "sex":{"@type":"radio", "male":"Male", "female":"Female"},
 "travel":{"@type":"checkbox", "car":"Car", "bike":"Bicycle"},
 "age":{"@@body":"Age:", "@type":"select",
        "0":"< 18", "18":"18-64", "65":"65+"
  },
 "description":{
   "@@body":"Description:",
   "@type":"textarea",
   "@value":"Default text"
  }
}

Proposal B: REST-oriented process

From [Kyle Cordes], for the discovery of the parameters:

  • You discover the URL of a service by some means.
  • You GET that URL, which returns an HTML form.
  • The HTML form describes where to POST to invoke that service, and what

parameters can be passed in that POST. In some cases, it will use <selects>s to describe what options are valid for a parameter.

  • In most cases, the form will be interspersed with human readable text,

to explain the meaning of the parameters (a machine-understandable way to explain parameter meaning, sounds like an AI problem...)

  • You (the user of a web browser, or a piece of software

programmatically using the server) populate the parameters and POST them to the URL you discovered via the form.

  • You get back a response, which might be an error message about a

parameter problem, or might be a respresentation of the "answer".

[OlaBerg] says: This is exactly what I do, and it works great! In fact, I use it both for POST-API and GET-API. A set of forms defines a REST-ful API.

See Also