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  Classes of Daniel McFeeters   FiForms Framework   README.txt   Download  
File: README.txt
Role: Documentation
Content type: text/plain
Description: Readme and installation instructions
Class: FiForms Framework
Framework for rapid Web application development
Author: By
Last change: Updated readme for version 0.9.2
Date: 19 years ago
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FiForms Framework 1.1 =============================== This is the README for the FiForms Framework version 1.1. The FiForms Framework enables developers to build web/database applications rapidly in XML. Using the unique FiForms XML Application Markup, a developer can build a complete database application without writing a single line of PHP code. History FiForms started as a collection of PHP classes for creating web-based data entry screens for a MySQL database. It has since grown into a collection of projects addressing many aspects of web-database development needs. The FiForms framework currently includes the FiForms data-entry classes and the FiReports XML report generation scripts. These libraries are combined scripts which utilize the new XML capabilities of PHP version 5 to create a framework for developing web applications completely in XML. The latest version of this software is available at the following web site: <http://www.fiforms.org> You can find documentation and setup instructions for the FiForms Framework on the wiki: <http://wiki.fiforms.org/> Documentation for XML schemas can be found at <http://xml.fiforms.org/> Quick Installation ================== To get FiForms up-and-running quickly, we suggest you follow the instructions outline on the wiki page http://wiki.fiforms.org/index.php/Installation Requirements ============ Before you can use FiForms, you must have the following software installed on your system: * an operating system (of course) FiForms should work on any operating system that Apache and PHP will run on. Most of the development and testing of FiForms has been done on Linux, but it should also run under Windows, OS X, BSD, etc. * an http webserver (works best on Apache webserver) <http://apache.org> * MySQL database server <http://mysql.org> FiForms works well with MySQL 4.0, 4.1, and 5.0. It should also work with other versions. * a PHP interpreter <http://www.php.net> FiForms requires PHP 5.x. * Php.XPath (this is included with FiForms if you are installing using a pre-built package or installer) <http://sourceforge.net/projects/phpxpath/> * XSLTProc (required if you will be using FiReportsXML with server-side transformation, and you are not using PHP_XSLT) <http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/> Install libxslt on your operating system and configure the path to XSLTProc in FiForms_global.inc.php Note to windows users: A package containing all the programs you need is available at http://downloads.sourceforge.net/myforms/FiForms_Binary_Dependencies_Win.zip This is a compliation of binaries available on Igor Zlatkovic' website: http://www.zlatkovic.com/libxml.en.html You can, alternativly, download libxml2, libxslt, iconv, and zlib from his website yourself. Extract each zip file and copy the contents of each bin directory into a single directory. Then point FIFORMS_XSLTPROC to the path you set. For example, if you copied the files to c:/libxml2, put this line in FiForms_global.inc.php: define("FIFORMS_XSLTPROC","c:/libxml2/xsltproc.exe"); * A Web Browser (On each client machine) Recommended: Mozilla Firefox Web Browser <http://mozilla.org/> Note: FiForms Forms should work fine in any browser (Firefox, Lynx, IE, etc). Depending on the way you configure the FiReport generator, you may require a browser that supports XML and XSLT (Firefox and IE 6 both do). This is the case if FiReports is configured for client-side transformation. If it is configured for server-side transformation, you will have to have xsltproc installed on the server but any browser will work on the client (including Konqueror, Lynx, and older version of IE which don't support XML). * Jaxe or your favorite XML editor (http://jaxe.sourceforge.net/) This software can save you a lot of time in creating FiForms XML applications. Jaxe configuration files for the FiForms XML schema are included in the package under example/jaxe. Simply copy these into your jaxe/config directory to start using them. Installation ============ Unzip the contents of the archive file into a new directory (if you have not already done so). We recommend placing FiForms outside of the DocumentRoot of your webserver, and configuring an alias to the scripts/ directory of FiForms in your webserver configuration. Once FiForms is installed, direct your browser to the scripts path in the new installation, for example, http://localhost/scripts/ or http://localhost/FiForms/scripts/ . You should be greeted with a configuration screen, where you can set parameters. Follow the on-screen instructions to complete the installation. Now you should be ready to start creating FiForms XML applications. Take a look at the examples included with this distribution. This will show you how you can make some simple FiForms. Before you can use the sample scripts, you will need to set up the MySQL database FiForms_sample. Use the included FiForms-sample.sql script to set up the database with the necessary tables. Of course, there are a lot more features in FiForms than are documented in the sample applications; please refer to the wiki and XML documentation online. 5-Minute Tutorial ================= FiForms XML Application ----------------------- Create a new directory structure under the apps directory in FiForms. The top level directory should be the name of your app. This directory should contain three subdirectories named forms, menus, and reports. All directory names are case-sensitive. "Register" the application by creating the appinfo.xml file in the application root. Create a Main Menu called main.xml in the menus directory. Place form and report definitions in their respective folders. References from the menu are relative to the base of their respective folders; i.e. you do not need to specify path in the href when linking to forms and reports from your menu. See the example application for more ideas. FiForms PHP Application ----------------------- Create your PHP scripts anywhere you want, but make sure the scripts are able to find the include files. This can be done using .htaccess files similar to the one in the example directory, or by adding the FiForms_includes directory to your include_path in php.ini. For both XML Applications and PHP Applications, please make use of the example files included with this distribution. Note: this method of creating applications is no longer recommended; please consider creating your new applications in XML. Authors ======= Founding Author: Daniel McFeeters <databases at alltel dot net> Contributing Authors: Kristina Reeve <covrainbow at yahoo dot com> D. Kevin Burk <dkburk at gmail dot com> Jared Colangelo <pilotpencil at users dot sourceforge dot net> Credits Kristina Reeve Development assistance, consultation, and inspiration to keep this project going. The Somerset Oil Refinery <http://somersetoil.com> Supporting development, testing software Jim McFeeters <http://scc-it.serveftp.net> Teaching me programming, and helping with suggestions in several features of FiForms D. Kevin Burk For (indirectly) challenging me to write this in the first place. Contributing ============ If you would like to contribute to this project, or if you have any questions or suggestions, send an e-mail to Daniel McFeeters <databases at alltel dot net> Bugs and To-Do List =================== See the Wiki http://wiki.fiforms.org/ License ======= Copyright (C) 2003-2008 Daniel McFeeters This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA