How to Install and Uninstall perl-HTML-FormHandler Package on openSUSE Leap

Last updated: May 19,2024

1. Install "perl-HTML-FormHandler" package

Please follow the step by step instructions below to install perl-HTML-FormHandler on openSUSE Leap

$ sudo zypper refresh $ sudo zypper install perl-HTML-FormHandler

2. Uninstall "perl-HTML-FormHandler" package

Learn how to uninstall perl-HTML-FormHandler on openSUSE Leap:

$ sudo zypper remove perl-HTML-FormHandler

3. Information about the perl-HTML-FormHandler package on openSUSE Leap

Information for package perl-HTML-FormHandler:
----------------------------------------------
Repository : Main Repository
Name : perl-HTML-FormHandler
Version : 0.40068-bp155.2.8
Arch : noarch
Vendor : openSUSE
Installed Size : 1.1 MiB
Installed : No
Status : not installed
Source package : perl-HTML-FormHandler-0.40068-bp155.2.8.src
Upstream URL : http://search.cpan.org/dist/HTML-FormHandler/
Summary : HTML forms using Moose
Description :
*** Although documentation in this file provides some overview, it is
mainly intended for API documentation. See HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Intro
for an introduction, with links to other documentation.
HTML::FormHandler maintains a clean separation between form construction
and form rendering. It allows you to define your forms and fields in a
number of flexible ways. Although it provides renderers for HTML, you can
define custom renderers for any kind of presentation.
HTML::FormHandler allows you to define form fields and validators. It can
be used for both database and non-database forms, and will automatically
update or create rows in a database. It can be used to process structured
data that doesn't come from an HTML form.
One of its goals is to keep the controller/application program interface as
simple as possible, and to minimize the duplication of code. In most cases,
interfacing your controller to your form is only a few lines of code.
With FormHandler you shouldn't have to spend hours trying to figure out how
to make a simple HTML change that would take one minute by hand. Because
you _can_ do it by hand. Or you can automate HTML generation as much as you
want, with template widgets or pure Perl rendering classes, and stay
completely in control of what, where, and how much is done automatically.
You can define custom renderers and display your rendered forms however you
want.
You can split the pieces of your forms up into logical parts and compose
complete forms from FormHandler classes, roles, fields, collections of
validations, transformations and Moose type constraints. You can write
custom methods to process forms, add any attribute you like, and use Moose
method modifiers. FormHandler forms are Perl classes, so there's a lot of
flexibility in what you can do.
HTML::FormHandler provides rendering through roles which are applied to
form and field classes (although there's no reason you couldn't write a
renderer as an external object either). There are currently two flavors:
all-in-one solutions like HTML::FormHandler::Render::Simple and
HTML::FormHandler::Render::Table that contain methods for rendering field
widget classes, and the HTML::FormHandler::Widget roles, which are more
atomic roles which are automatically applied to fields and form. See
HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Rendering for more details. (And you can easily
use hand-built forms - FormHandler doesn't care.)
The typical application for FormHandler would be in a Catalyst,
DBIx::Class, Template Toolkit web application, but use is not limited to
that. FormHandler can be used in any Perl application.
More Formhandler documentation and a tutorial can be found in the manual at
HTML::FormHandler::Manual.