Those pointers helped a lot. I found lots of articles now. It seemes,
'embed(ded) forms' and 'nest(ed) form(s)' are the correctly wording to
get the most results for searches. Thank you very much. I will look at
these resources now. :-)
On Sep 27, 7:44 am, Steve the Canuck wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I thi
Hi,
I think the big problem I ran into is the symfony 1.2 book claims to
be the primary reference but contains no documentation on forms. It
was a whlie before I realized I had to read the forms book too!
Regardless, the forms book doesn't have any examples on embedding. I
had to experiment wit
I'm almost there. The Symfony 1.2 book is OK, but the website on forms
seems a lot better. (Almost there means ready to ask more
questions :-) The learning curve is VERY steep on this thing. Not as
bad as reading through 'Oracle Speak' documentation, but at least 40%
as involved.
If nothing else,
Hey Dennis,
you should be able to embed related forms in each other.
Sounds like the userform should be your starting point, and in the
configure function do something like:
foreach($this -> object -> getAddresses() as $key => $address)
{
$this -> embedForm("form_".$key, new AddressForm($addre
No 'bytes' huh? I bought a lot of books on symfony/doctrine, guess
I'll look at those.
PS, DON'T use 'char(acter)' fields in a Doctrine/Postgresql
combination. The fields stay zero padded and when a field gets edited,
it ends up too long, even if the original version, unedited, is saved.
Doctrine