A. You can maximize the Palette View.
B. You can move the Palette to a different location in the perspective.
C. You can change the order of Palette items.
D. You can hide the entire Palette.
A. Go into the XForms View, select the Model node, then right-click and select "Create Bind (Wizard)".
B. Right-click a field and select "Create Bind (Wizard)".
C. There is no bind wizard: binds must be manually created.
D. Go into the Instance View, select the desired node element, then right-click and select "Create Bind (Wizard)".
A. The Client's Browser sends the XForms submission as HTML directly to the submission URL.
B. The Client's Browser sends the XForms submission as XML directly to the submission URL.
C. The Translator Server sends the XForms submission as HTML directly to the submission URL.
D. The Translator Server sends the XForms submission as XML directly to the submission URL.
A.
B.
C.
D. on
A. Yes, by using the IBM Forms JavaScript API.
B. Yes, but it can only close the form or tell it to submit.
C. Yes, by adding a HTML listener compute to the form.
D. Yes, by embedding some JavaScript into the form.
A. PUSH, POST, PULL, DELETE
B. PUT, POST, GET, DELETE
C. PUSH, POST, GET, REMOVE
D. PUT, POST, PULL, REMOVE
A. Add a web service object to the canvas Add a field Add an xforms:submission
B. Add a web service object to the canvas Select a WSDL Pick a function Bind the inputs, outputs and trigger.
C. Add an XForms Submission Add a field Link the field to the instance being submitted
D. Add a web service object to the canvas Bind the inputs, outputs and trigger
A. XFDL future-proofs electronic forms as they are in human-readable XML.
B. XFDL makes pre-populating form data easier because of its code level engine.
C. XFDL simplifies HTML programming.
D. XFDL documents can be rendered by any word processing software.