Search Engine Optimization > Webmaster World > Email form
Email form
Posted by MTC on October 28th, 2005

As virtually every website of any consequence has this, I feel a bit foolish
not being able to figure out how to do it.

Anyway, I want to put a sign-up form on the main page of my site that will
collect the visitors name and email, then send them to another webpage
("thank you" page, download page, etc.) once the information has been
submitted. I've looked everywhere I can think of for a script or something
that will do this with no results.

The closest I have been able to come is a form generator that creates a form
on a seperate page (that can't be edited) that the visitor has to click a
link to get to.


Posted by trevor on October 28th, 2005

you have to at least try, even for one milisecond, to find your answer by
SEARCHING for it.

Posted by Mark Parnell on October 28th, 2005

In our last episode, MTC <freightshkr@earthlink.net> pronounced to
alt.www.webmaster:

Sounds pretty straight forward.

Have you tried your host? Most usually have a basic form handler script
available.

Otherwise it will depend what server-side language(s) you have available
to you. But there are plenty around. E.g. for PHP:
http://hotscripts.com/PHP/Scripts_an...ors/index.html

--
Mark Parnell
http://clarkecomputers.com.au

Posted by Matt-the-Hoople on October 28th, 2005

Quoth trevor in alt.www.webmaster

Trevor is right, though I think it's more like a femtosecond.

http://www.boaddrink.com/

--
# www.mattlindi.com
# matt.lindi@your_clothes_mattlindi.com
# remove _your_clothes_ to email me

Posted by William Tasso on October 28th, 2005

Writing in news:alt.www.webmaster
From the safety of the EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net cafeteria
MTC <freightshkr@earthlink.net> said:

research: HTML form element

--
William Tasso

virtue is its own punishment

Posted by MTC on October 28th, 2005



"trevor" <not@your.house> wrote in message
news:11m3g521j4u1v55@corp.supernews.com...
As I pointed out, I HAVE searched for it. I've been to dozens of "script"
sites from multiple search engines, waded through hundreds of postings on
website design forums, Yahoo Groups, Gmail Groups and Topica groups. As of
yet, I have found nothing that specifically meets the requirements (at least
in the descriptions of the scripts and methods available as I am able to
understand them) necessary for what I need to do. Obviously, I have not
looked in the right places. That's why I, as a last (for obvious reasons)
resort, came to this NG hoping for some advice or a recomendation of a
specific script, etc..

At least, if all else fails, I can take comfort in the knowledge that I have
assisted you in validating your existence and sleep well tonight.



Posted by MTC on October 28th, 2005


"Mark Parnell" <webmaster@clarkecomputers.com.au> wrote in message
news:4361c3cc$0$21701$5a62ac22@per-qv1-newsreader-01.iinet.net.au...
Thanks for the information!

My host does have a form generator. It's the one that requires that the
visitor click a link that takes them to the form on another page rather than
having it incorporated on my main page.

I checked out the link you offered. As it's obvious I know very little about
this, my next question would be: is having the visitor automatically sent to
another page something common to these scripts? The descriptions seem only
to make reference to how the collected information is handled.



Posted by Tina - AxisHOST, Inc. on October 28th, 2005

"MTC" <freightshkr@earthlink.net> wrote in message
news:GGm8f.1264$m81.398@newsread1.news.atl.earthli nk.net...
Are you sure? You should be able to use the form code on any page that you
wish.

--Tina



Posted by Alan Little on October 28th, 2005

Carved in mystic runes upon the very living rock, the last words of MTC
of alt.www.webmaster make plain:

If I understand correctly, your main issue is with how to have the form
itself included in your page. There are plenty of form generators, but if
you want it included in your page, you're probably going to have to get
your hands a little dirty and cut-and-paste the form code. You're
probably better off just learning how to create a form in HTML -- it's
quite easy, really.

Once that's done you need something on the back end that receives the
form contents and does stuff with it. There are lots of scripts for this;
I of course recommend Phorm.

--
Alan Little
Phorm PHP Form Processor
http://www.phorm.com/

Posted by trevor on October 28th, 2005

since you were so kind as to have provided that wonderful night's sleep by
assisting me to validate my existance, try the one indicated here:

http://www.stargeek.com/php_email_tutorial.php

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