tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7970679050025899967.post1766334222811765577..comments2023-11-24T03:56:57.923-08:00Comments on Adobe LiveCycle Designer Cookbooks by BR001: Listing all fields in a formBR001http://www.blogger.com/profile/02005650446661555680noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7970679050025899967.post-20813611867549871642014-02-04T12:56:29.390-08:002014-02-04T12:56:29.390-08:00Hi Bruce,
great idea.
I tooked this and created a...Hi Bruce,<br /><br />great idea.<br />I tooked this and created a macro for Designer which will generate the XSLT and XML files with the correct namespaces.<br />The user then only needs to open the generated XML file with Excel.<br /><br />Here's the macro:<br />https://files.acrobat.com/preview/74781f70-aac4-4e09-8802-3161b0831281<br /><br />;-)<br />Marcusradzmarhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16208021869177153799noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7970679050025899967.post-72036449215632503262014-02-01T13:35:57.934-08:002014-02-01T13:35:57.934-08:00Hi Tom,
One of the options for distributing a for...Hi Tom,<br /><br />One of the options for distributing a form is using Adobe Acrobat and the Tools ... Forms ... Distribute option. There are a few options offered but the simplest is probably the Email option and "manually send later". The forms can then be collected and a response file created. Have a look at http://www.adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/products/acrobat/pdfs/adobe-acrobat-xi-distribute-pdf-forms-analyze-responses-tutorial-ue.pdf<br /><br />This all works well but the response file can be a bit raw and in need of some tidy-up work.<br /><br />The reason I wanted a list of form objects was so I could send them to my business area so they could review the captions, tooltips and error messages.<br /><br />BruceBrucehttp://adobelivecycledesignercookbookbybr001.blogspot.com.aunoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7970679050025899967.post-53465803642077717312014-01-31T05:00:12.890-08:002014-01-31T05:00:12.890-08:00This looks interesting.... I admit I do not unders...This looks interesting.... I admit I do not understand all of it or why a person may want to it.<br /><br />I did find this information interesting -<br />"This approach can also be helpful in working with a response file from the collection of returned forms. If you export the responses as XML then they can be processed by an XSLT and loaded into Excel in the same way."<br /><br />Could you provide some detail on this? Is a response file a special output or are you simply talking about a filled form that has been saved? Sorry for the newbie question but I am interested in looking more.<br /><br />Thanks!Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00618503791570780376noreply@blogger.com