Creating Applications: Adding Multivalued Fields

Although some applications only require multiple-choice fields where only a single value may be chosen, in many situations it is desirable to be able to choose an arbitrary number of values for a particular field. However, up to this point, we have been content to represent form data using a single attribute on a single element to represent any given field value. With multivalued fields, we must choose a different strategy in using XML to represent such information.

Let us consider permitting multiple type values to be associated with our items. We revise our form data structure to be the following:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<structure>
<item value="some value">
<type>
<type-enum value="some type"/>
<type-enum value="some other type"/>
</type>
<subitem subvalue="some other value"/>
</item>
</structure>

Multivalued Fields

We shall now take advantage of those HTML form fields which permit users to select one or many values presented in a list or menu.

Some item: 

Item type:

Itself containing more items:

Sub-item:

From the item type list many value may now be selected.

Taking the example HTML code from before, we can add a definition of this new list to the template to produce something like this:

<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
xmlns:template="http://www.boddie.org.uk/ns/xmltools/template">
<head>
<title>Example</title>
</head>
<body template:element="structure">
<form action="" method="post">

<!-- Template text between the start and the interesting part. -->

<div template:element="item">
<p>
Some item: <input template:attribute-field="value" name="..." type="text" value="..." />
<input name="..." template:selector-field="remove" type="submit" value="Remove" />
</p>
<p>
Item type:
<select name="..." template:multiple-choice-list-field="type,type-enum,value" multiple="multiple">
<option template:multiple-choice-list-value="type-enum,value,selected" value="..." />
</select>
</p>
<p>
Itself containing more items:
</p>
<p template:element="subitem">
Sub-item: <input template:attribute-field="subvalue" name="..." type="text" value="..." />
<input name="..." template:selector-field="remove2" type="submit" value="Remove" />
</p>
<p>
<input name="..." template:selector-field="add2,subitem" type="submit" value="Add subitem" />
</p>
</div>
<p>
<input name="..." template:selector-field="add,item" type="submit" value="Add item" />
</p>

<!-- Template text between the interesting part and the end. -->

</form>
</body>
</html>

From the previous single-valued case, some crucial changes have been made:

  1. The select element remains mapped onto the type element in the form data structure. However, we use a different attribute, template:multiple-choice-list-field, to indicate that a type element is created when the form data is submitted, but instead of a single value being added to the value attribute of that one element, a separate type-enum element is created within the type element with a value in its value attribute for each value submitted. This means that many type-enum elements may be created within the type element, and each one of them will have a different value attribute.
  2. Of course, the select element now has a multiple attribute defined to permit multiple value selections.
  3. Inside the select element, the option element now employs the template:multiple-choice-list-value annotation.

Output Structures

Unlike in the single-valued case, the revised the form data structure for input is almost the same as the structure used by the template. Indeed, the subtle differences cannot be represented in our simplistic presentation of the structure:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<structure>
<item value="some value">
<type>
<type-enum value="some type"/>
<type-enum value="some other type"/>
</type>
<subitem subvalue="some other value"/>
</item>
</structure>

In fact, the principal difference arises through the number of type-enum elements that occur in the input, representing the values selected by the user, and the number that occur in the output, representing the complete range of values available for selection.

Presenting the Extra Values

In most respects, the presentation of the extra values is the same as in the single-valued case. The result of the presentation of the extra values is that the type element in the this example structure fragment...

<type>
<type-enum value="1"/>
<type-enum value="2" value-is-set="true"/>
<type-enum value="3" value-is-set="true"/>
</type>

...is transformed into something resembling this HTML code:

<select name="..." multiple="multiple">
<option value="1">1</option>
<option value="2" selected="selected">2</option>
<option value="3" selected="selected">3</option>
</select>

Above, the special value-is-set attribute is an XSLForms mechanism to remember which values were set. Fortunately, the document initialisation mechanism automatically distinguishes between different multiple-choice field types and understands where the above approach needs to be employed.

Updating the Web Resource

To update the special WebStack resource, we now need to modify a few of the class attributes and to add a few others:

    template_resources = {
"structure" : ("structure_multivalue_template.xhtml", "structure_output.xsl")
}

With these adjustments, it should now be possible to manipulate the items and subitems whilst specifying multiple type values on each item. Note that it may be necessary to remove the old stylesheet for producing output, structure_output.xsl, so that the multivalue version of the template is taken into use.

Further Reading

Now that we have designed and implemented a simple application, it may be worth reading some recommendations about developing your own applications.