One example I've seen recently - one button is labeled Save, one is
Save and Edit, so if you click Save and Edit, your changes are stored
and you end up back on the form. If you click Save, you go back to the
list.

So sure - that could be a choice, but two buttons are easier.

On 8/5/07, Phillip M. Vector <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have to ask...
>
> Why do you have 2 submit buttons? If you are having the user make a
> choice, why not a dropdown, checkbox, radio button or some such?
>
> If it's to load a terms of service or some such, why not a input of
> "button" with some JS to direct it to that page?
>
> Sorry. Not meaning to sound rude, but I can't fathom why you need 2
> submits on 1 form.
>
> Steve Sequenzia wrote:
> > Ray,
> >
> > Thanks for the help again.
> >
> > Yeah it is confusing me. I have tried submitting to the same page and to a 
> > different page and it always has the same result. The second button is 
> > ignored.
> >
> > I don't know what the deal is. At least it is not just me, if it surprised 
> > you then there must really be something wrong.
> >
> > Thanks again, you are the man.
> >
>
> 

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