In this example, you can see how a company with two specific user groups can use Dynamic Forms. We used Employer and Prospective Employee as our two groups. Depending on which group the user selects, the user sees a different set of questions in the form, and is directed to a different page upon submitting the form.
Below is a list of each field and how it is set up.
1) Are you an Employer or a Prospective Employee: radio buttons. A series of Question Events are set up to have subsequent questions based upon this question’s response. Once the user chooses an answer, a series of questions appears – the user does not need to hit the “Submit Form” button to initiate the list of questions.
Fields below are for users who choose Employer:
1) Industry: combo box with choices manually typed.
2) Company name: text box
3) Contact name: text box
4) Contact title: text box
5) Contact email: text box
6) Mailing address: text box
7) City: text box
8) State: SQL Driven Query
9) ZIP code: text box with regular expression allowing US ZIP codes in five-digit format (12345), or five digits + four (12345-6789). Regular expression used: (^\d{5}$)|(^\d{5}-\d{4}$)
10) Phone number: text box with regular expression for validating US phone numbers.
Fields below are for users who choose Prospective Employee:
1) First name: text box
2) Last name: text box
3) Mailing address: text box
4) City: text box
5) State: SQL Driven Query
6) ZIP code: text box with regular expression allowing US ZIP codes in five-digit format (12345), or five digits + four (12345-6789). Regular expression used: (^\d{5}$)|(^\d{5}-\d{4}$)
7) Phone number: text box with regular expression for validating US phone numbers.
8) Email: text box
9) Past work experience: multiline text box
Upon submission, the form redirects the user to a new page. Employer and Potential Employee each have a separate re-direct page – this is set up in Form Completion Events.
See other Form Demos.