While you may have plans to implement some much more complex forms using Form Reform, we strongly recommend you start with a simple form such as this contact form example in order to learn the basic principles of using Form Reform before you move onto anything bigger.
Here we have a simple contact form built using Form Reform. It is built by placing Form Reform blocks into a Concrete CMS layout. The blocks used are listed at the bottom of this page.
Feel free to submit the form as often as you want. The form is saved to your session, but the data is not saved or logged anywhere else. All it does is validate the inputs and return a success or error message. The session data facilitates persistence of some inputs, so you only need to enter your name and email once. You can also see your most recent form submission presented using Form Reform Display.
Check out the edit mode details below.
Submit processing is handled by the pipeline shown. We have a growing toolkit of handlers that can be added and arranged to configure form Submit processing.
The pipeline shown below is a front-end non-editable version of the pipeline used to handle the above form. You can expand any stages to view the details. The submitted form is only saved to your session.
The Condition If section towards the end of our pipeline is to add a display of any UTM tags, as described in Example - Tracking UTM tags. If you are not using Form Reform UTM, you can ignore that part of the pipeline.
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All the blocks in this example form, except for the Message block, are configured to not be rendered when a success message is shown.
Looking down this list, in addition to the alert levels we also have some generic Step 1 ... Step 5 states. All forms begin in Step 1 and can be set into other states by a handler block. These can be used to reveal multi-part forms as states are changed by a handler for each state (The number of form states available is managed through a configuration value).
You can also create tabbed forms using Magic Tabs, as you would for tabbed arrangements of any Concrete CMS blocks.
In edit mode, the blocks for the form look something like this (with extra outline added for clarity).
Re-arranging a form is a simple matter of dragging blocks and editing Layouts (or Containers in v9). Adding or removing inputs is a simple matter of adding or removing blocks. Any regular blocks can be mixed in with form input blocks to provide explanation or design.
Source Page / Stack | Form Name | Block Type | Input Name |
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Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Email Input | |
Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Text Input | first_name |
Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Text Input | last_name |
Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Select Input | pronoun |
Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Message Display | |
Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Radioset Input | subject |
Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Text Area Input | message |
Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Honeypot | more |
Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Captcha | |
Example - Getting Started - Your first form | form_reform | Submit Button | submit |
In other form builders, hidden inputs would be added to forms to provide and track extra data with the form submission. With Form Reform you should re-evaluate the need for hidden inputs. There are in many cases better alternatives that add the data directly into the form handler pipeline.
All of these add the previously hidden data during the form submit processing, so the data is never exposed to the visitor's browser.
If you need a specialized template or a custom input element, you can design new templates or new block types for form elements as you would any block type.
Blocks are easy for third party addition or extension. Block templates and are the first thing any Concrete CMS developer learns to code. They are one of the easiest things to code. The underlying mechanisms are well established and reliable.
Form handlers are built about the same extensible plugin system as many of my other addons (Universal Content Puller, Omni Gallery, Extreme Clean ...).
The whole system is aimed at easy extension within Form Reform, by third party addons, by agencies and by site building developers.
Handlers can be easily added to do whatever you want with the form data.
Saving form data with Form Reform is simply a handler in the processing pipeline. You can save to multiple locations or just one location.
If you need to save data elsewhere, such as to a dedicated table, a table provided through another addon, to another database, send it to an API, forward it to another server, or anywhere you can imagine, you can adapt or develop a form handler to do so.
The complexity of the code depends on where you are saving or sending the data, but wrapping that into a form handler plugin for Form Reform is straight forward.
The Form Reform handler plugin system is designed for easy extension.
Reform the way forms are built. Build a form out of blocks. Take control of how form submissions are processed and how the submitted data is stored. Easy to extend. Easy to reconfigure. Tangible data. Easy to add your own integrations.
List and display form submissions from Form Reform.
Not just Form Reform and not just UTM! Capture and hold incoming UTM (or other) tags and make the tag values available to Form Reform and/or Conditional Redirect as {{place_holders}}. You don't need Form Reform to use this.
Form handlers for querying Microsoft Dynamics, forwarding and updating form data to Microsoft Dynamics.
A suite of advanced image capture and upload tools. Enhanced drag and drop file uploading. Make screengrabs from within Concrete CMS. Capture images directly from device webcams. Edit images before uploading.
Save submitted forms to Express objects and user attributes. Add and remove users from groups.
Form Reform Image Picker provides an image picking input block for Form Reform. The Image Picker Input is preconfigured to connect to most Omni Gallery gallery and slider display widgets, the core gallery block, and thumbnail showing templates for the core page list block. Advanced settings allow the Image Picker Input to be configured to pick images from other galleries and sliders.
Form Reform Data Picker provides data picking input blocks for Form Reform. The Table Picker Input is preconfigured to connect to Universal Content Puller table display widgets. Advanced settings allow the Table Picker Input to be configured to pick data from other HTML tables.
Extends Form Reform with form handler macros. Provides a new dashboard page at System & Settings > Form Reform > Form Reform Macros to manage macros, and form handlers to run macros.
A growing suite of resources to assist those developing blocks, handlers and more complex forms for Form Reform.
While you may have plans to implement some much more complex forms using Form Reform, we strongly recommend you start with a simple form such as our contact form example in order to review the basic principles of using Form Reform before you move onto anything bigger.
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