Adobe 62000112DM User Guide - Page 215

Decisions based on form content, Getting Started window.

Page 215 highlights

ADOBE ACROBAT 3D VERSION 8 208 User Guide Note: You can start LiveCycle Designer from the Windows Start menu, or from within Acrobat Professional, either by choosing Forms > Create New Form and following the wizard for creating a new form or by selecting a Forms task in the Getting Started window. Decisions based on form content Planning your PDF form depends on what information will be exchanged through the form. Different types of infor­ mation correspond to various form elements, which are designed especially for that kind of data. In Windows, the choice between editing a form in Acrobat or editing it in LiveCycle Designer is also influenced by the content of the form. Your answers to the following questions may guide your decision about what elements to include in the form layout and which application to use to create and edit the form. What information do I need to collect from the user? This most basic planning step depends on your goals in sending out the form. What information should I provide to the user? Besides providing the questions and labels for information the person filling in the form will provide, many forms identify the person or organization that originated the form and provide contact information, instructions, graphics, logos, and so forth. If you want to edit the text or change the layout of an existing PDF form, you must edit the original source document in its native authoring application or, in Windows only, you can edit the file in LiveCycle Designer. Do I want to receive barcoded information? (Windows) Barcoding fields are supported by both Acrobat and LiveCycle Designer, with more options available in LiveCycle Designer. What are the different types of information the users will submit? PDF forms can collect many kinds of data: typed text, numbers, a single selection from limited choices, multiple selections from limited choices, and so on. The data you want to collect affects the types of form fields you use. For example, List Box fields force users to choose just one answer from a list of limited possibilities, but you could configure radio buttons that would do the same thing. Which you use might depend on the amount of space available, usability factors, and design aesthetics. What user-input is essential and what information can be optional? This issue is an offshoot of your primary goal for the form. It's helpful to identify what data fields are essential and should be set up as required, as compared to data that is only supplementary for other purposes. For example, if the form is a purchase order, you cannot send the merchandise to the purchaser without a shipping address. However, if the user left a "Comments" field blank, you could still carry out the primary function of the form, so you wouldn't want to mark it as a required field.

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208
ADOBE ACROBAT 3D VERSION 8
User Guide
Note:
You can start LiveCycle Designer from the Windows Start menu, or from within Acrobat Professional, either by
choosing Forms > Create New Form and following the wizard for creating a new form or by selecting a Forms task in the
Getting Started window.
Decisions based on form content
Planning your PDF form depends on what information will be exchanged through the form. Different types of infor±
mation correspond to various form elements, which are designed especially for that kind of data.
In Windows, the choice between editing a form in Acrobat or editing it in LiveCycle Designer is also influenced by
the content of the form.
Your answers to the following questions may guide your decision about what elements to include in the form layout
and which application to use to create and edit the form.
What information do I need to collect from the user?
This most basic planning step depends on your goals in sending out the form.
What information should I provide to the user?
Besides providing the questions and labels for information the person filling in the form will provide, many forms
identify the person or organization that originated the form and provide contact information, instructions, graphics,
logos, and so forth.
If
you
want
to
edit
the
text
or
change the layout of an existing PDF form, you must edit the original source document
in its native authoring application or, in Windows only, you can edit the file in LiveCycle Designer.
Do I want to receive barcoded information? (Windows)
Barcoding fields are supported by both Acrobat and LiveCycle Designer, with more options available in LiveCycle
Designer.
What are the different types of information the users will submit?
PDF forms can collect many kinds of data: typed text, numbers, a single selection from limited choices, multiple
selections from limited choices, and so on. The data you want to collect affects the types of form fields you use.
For example, List Box fields force users to choose just one answer from a list of limited possibilities, but you could
configure radio buttons that would do the same thing. Which you use might depend on the amount of space
available, usability factors, and design aesthetics.
What user-input is essential and what information can be optional?
This issue is an offshoot of your primary goal for the form. It’s helpful to identify what data fields are essential and
should be set up as required, as compared to data that is only supplementary for other purposes. For example, if the
form is a purchase order, you cannot send the merchandise to the purchaser without a shipping address. However, if
the user left a “Comments” field blank, you could still carry out the primary function of the form, so you wouldn’t
want to mark it as a required field.