TIP 64: Building a Form in Acrobat
Acrobat includes a toolbar of form field creation tools. Click the Form Field tool to select it on the toolbar, drag a marquee on the document where you want to place the field, and release the mouse. The outline for the field displays on the document, and the Properties dialog opens for you to name the field and customize its properties and options (Figure 64a). The contents of the Properties dialog vary according to the type of form field you are applying to the document.
Figure 64a. The Properties dialog for a field contains different options depending on the type of field you are creating.
Setting a Standard
Adding individual form fields and then configuring each one is very time-consumingnot to mention unnecessary. Add a field to your document, and configure it as you like. Right-click/Control-click to open the shortcut menu and choose Use Current Properties as Default. Whatever settings you've used for the field, such as border color or font, are set as the default for subsequent fields. Then add the remaining fields, either using the shortcuts or adding each field individually. Do you want a different look for a radio button than for a check box? No problem. Each set of default properties you define applies only to a specific type of form field. |
Choose Tools > Advanced Editing > Show Forms Toolbar. The available tools and their common uses are: Button tool
Use a button to initiate actions that can be used for everything from printing a document to submitting a form or playing a sound. Buttons are discussed in Chapter 12. Check Box tool
Where your user can choose one or more options, use a check box. For instance, if your form includes a list of favorite holiday destinations, your user might like to specify all three choices of Hawaii, Jamaica, and Tahiti. Combo Box tool
You can offer a list of items in a pull-down menu or let your user enter a custom value. For example, your order form can include several choices of countries where you commonly ship your products, as well as an option for customers to type their country name. List Box tool
Create a list of items from which your user can select; usually list boxes are designed to allow for multiple selections. For example, when building your dream car at an online site you can choose any or all items from a list of accessoriesof course, that doesn't mean you can afford them, but it is nice to dream.
See What You are Building
Choose Edit > Preferences > Forms (or Acrobat > Preferences > Forms) and click the preference Show field preview when creating or editing form fields. Then close the Preferences dialog. Now when you work on your form fields, you see the structure and content. |
Radio Button tool
Add radio buttons when you want the user to make a single choice among two or more items. An example is a customer service form that lets the user choose among a range of responses, from "terrific" to "terrible." Text Box tool
Use this tool to create a field in which your users can type text, such as their names, addresses, or favorite colors. Digital Signature tool
Use this tool to add a special type of field used to apply a digital signature to the document. Learn more about digital signatures in Chapter 18.
When adding form fields to a document where the tag structure is very important (like one that connects to a database, for example), make sure that: You open the Tags pane, click the Options menu, and select Tag Annotations. You select the tag in the Tags pane that you want to be the parent of the form field you intend to add to the document (Figure 64b).
Figure 64b. Before you add a field, select the parent tag in the Tags pane.
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