Cornerstones: DMX Forms
Forms are one of the most important aspects of web interactivity. Without forms, we wouldn’t be able to use the web to shop, make hotel and airline reservations, and contact companies and individuals via their sites. Dreamweaver MX makes it especially easy to implement forms.
Of course, forms can get very complex, depending upon how detailed your needs are. What’s more, processing forms can be handled in numerous ways—often relying on server-side scripts to process. In this article, I’ll focus on how to create a form using the most common techniques and leave advanced and server-side information to future or related articles. The point here is to get you familiar with Dreamweaver’s form options and commonly used form components.
molly holzschlag
Coined "one of the greatest digerati" and deemed one of the Top 25 Most Influential Women on the Web, there is little doubt that in the world of Web design and development, Molly E. Holzschlag is one of the most vibrant and influential people around. With over 25 Web development book titles to her credit, Molly currently serves as Communications Director for the World Organization of Webmasters.
As a steering committee member for the Web Standards Project (WaSP), Molly works along with a group of other dedicated Web developers and designers to promote W3C recommendations. She also teaches Webmaster courses for the University of Arizona, University of Phoenix, and Pima Community College. She wrote the very popular column, Integrated Design, for Web Techniques Magazine for the last three years of its life, and spent a year as Executive Editor of WebReview.com.