Reputation: 993
I have a form that collects client's info and then it
Now, the first 2 two task was easy, but the third one is giving me trouble. For SF i don't have do anything special, just have to add their url and they will pull out all the necessary info they need from the form. To me it seems like in order to do these i need the form have 2 actions associated with one submit button (can't have 2 forms or 2 buttons).
So in my raf.php
file I have this form, and after submission i have to redirect them to raf-submitted.php
page that displays the success/error message and other necessary info.
The form (got the idea from here)
<form id="referralForm" name="referralForm" autocomplete="off" enctype="multipart/form-data" method="POST">
<input id="saveForm" name="saveForm" class="field-submit" type="button" value="Submit" style="padding-left:20px" width="100" tabindex="23" onclick="FormSubmission(); SalesForceSubmission();" />
</form>
The JavaScript:
$(document).ready(function()
{
function SalesForceSubmission()
{
document.referralForm.action = "https://someAddress.salesforce.com/";
document.referralForm.submit();
return true;
}
function FormSubmission()
{
document.referralForm.action = "raf-submitted.php";
document.referralForm.submit();
return true;
}
});
The raf-submitted.php
file take cares of the form validation, database insertion and email issues.
It's not working. I also tried these with no luck:
Can someone please help me? Thank you!
Upvotes: 7
Views: 59825
Reputation: 1458
This looks a lot like something I was trying to do. You've already got an answer marked, but I don't think it's the simple answer you were looking for.
Assuming task 3 above can be done with a POST to some SalesForce .PHP location, and the first two tasks could be done in a JavaScript function, I think this will work:
<form method="post" action="SubmitToSalesForce.php">
<button type="submit" name="doThreeThings" onclick="doTheFirstTwoTasks();" >
</form
<script type="text/javascript">
function doTheFirstTwoTasks() {
// Task 1
// Task 2
}
</script>
It first calls the doTheFirstTwoTasks()
function via onclick=
to do tasks 1 and 2, and then submits the form via a normal form submission to the action=
location for the third task.
Nothing special, but I don't know how many people have learned that you can use onclick=
and type=submit
(with action=
) for two different actions in a single form with a single submit button.
In the code above, it seems to call the onclick=
before the action=
(or perhaps it's just because the POST submission is slower than calling a JavaScript function...)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1
function fun_atualizar() {
document.orcamento.action = "atualizar_orcamento.php";
document.orcamento.submit();
return true;
}
function fun_evento() {
document.orcamento.action = "Evento_orc.php";
document.orcamento.submit();
return true;
}
<input type="button" value="Atualizar" style="padding-left:20px" width="100" tabindex="23" onclick="javascript:fun_atualizar();" />
<input type="button" value="Evento" style="padding-left:20px" width="100" tabindex="23" onclick="javascript:fun_evento();" />
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 15158
The only way to do this in client side is using AJAX.
It is better to do SF stuff in server side (via DB if you have access or Web service if they have one or at least sending data via CURL at server side).
it is possible one of submissions fail in client side (and it seems to be bad if second one fail - first request has no idea that scond one is not done properly).
EDIT:
Sample code for posting with CURL:
assuming you have a form with a text
and a hidden
input:
<form method='post' action='http://your.sf.site/your_sf_submit_page.php'>
<input type='text' name='field1'/>
<input type='hidden' name='field2'/>
</form>
you can submit it using CURL like this:
$ch = curl_init();
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_URL,"http://your.sf.site/your_sf_submit_page.php");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_POST, 1);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS,"field1=value1&field2=value2");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true);
$server_output = curl_exec ($ch);
curl_close ($ch);
then you can check $server_output
for being sure that form is submitted correctly.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 8228
If you have control over the raf-submitted.php page what I'd suggest is that you have an onclick action for the form which (after local validation) uses jQuery.ajax to call your page providing the field values as parameters in the query string (if using GET) then simply allow the submit process to continue passing the data to SalesForce.
If however you need to make the Salesforce activity invisible then you could call them the same way using type=POST and hand off to your form after that completes
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 114347
Once a form is submitted, you are no longer on that page. You've navigated away.
The other way you can do this is submit the first action via AJAX, then submit the form naturally to the second destination. I would suggest using jQuery to make your AJAX calls since most of the AJAX code is already there for you to use.
Another option is to have raf-submitted.php
perform a POST from your server to the salesforce server once it receives the form data. See: Post to another page within a PHP script
Upvotes: 2