Provided by: libhtml-widget-perl_1.11-4_all bug

NAME

       HTML::Widget - HTML Widget And Validation Framework

NOTE

       HTML::Widget is no longer under active development and the current maintainers are instead
       pursuing an intended replacement (see the mailing-list for details).

       Volunteer maintainers / developers for HTML::Widget, please contact the mailing-list.

SYNOPSIS

           use HTML::Widget;

           # Create a widget
           my $w = HTML::Widget->new('widget')->method('get')->action('/');

           # Add a fieldset to contain the elements
           my $fs = $w->element( 'Fieldset', 'user' )->legend('User Details');

           # Add some elements
           $fs->element( 'Textfield', 'age' )->label('Age')->size(3);
           $fs->element( 'Textfield', 'name' )->label('Name')->size(60);
           $fs->element( 'Submit', 'ok' )->value('OK');

           # Add some constraints
           $w->constraint( 'Integer', 'age' )->message('No integer.');
           $w->constraint( 'Not_Integer', 'name' )->message('Integer.');
           $w->constraint( 'All', 'age', 'name' )->message('Missing value.');

           # Add some filters
           $w->filter('Whitespace');

           # Process
           my $result = $w->process;
           my $result = $w->process($query);

           # Check validation results
           my @valid_fields   = $result->valid;
           my $is_valid       = $result->valid('foo');
           my @invalid_fields = $result->have_errors;
           my $is_invalid     = $result->has_errors('foo');;

           # CGI.pm-compatible! (read-only)
           my $value  = $result->param('foo');
           my @params = $result->param;

           # Catalyst::Request-compatible
           my $value = $result->params->{foo};
           my @params = keys %{ $result->params };

           # Merge widgets (constraints and elements will be appended)
           $widget->merge($other_widget);

           # Embed widgets (as fieldset)
           $widget->embed($other_widget);

           # Get list of elements
           my @elements = $widget->get_elements;

           # Get list of constraints
           my @constraints = $widget->get_constraints;

           # Get list of filters
           my @filters = $widget->get_filters;

           # Complete xml result
           [% result %]
           [% result.as_xml %]

           # Iterate over elements
           <form action="/foo" method="get">
           [% FOREACH element = result.elements %]
               [% element.field_xml %]
               [% element.error_xml %]
           [% END %]
           </form>

           # Iterate over validation errors
           [% FOREACH element = result.have_errors %]
               <p>
               [% element %]:<br/>
               <ul>
               [% FOREACH error = result.errors(element) %]
                   <li>
                       [% error.name %]: [% error.message %] ([% error.type %])
                   </li>
               [% END %]
               </ul>
               </p>
           [% END %]

           <p><ul>
           [% FOREACH element = result.have_errors %]
               [% IF result.error( element, 'Integer' ) %]
                   <li>[% element %] has to be an integer.</li>
               [% END %]
           [% END %]
           </ul></p>

           [% FOREACH error = result.errors %]
               <li>[% error.name %]: [% error.message %] ([% error.type %])</li>
           [% END %]

           # XML output looks like this (easy to theme with css)
           <form action="/foo/bar" id="widget" method="post">
               <fieldset>
                   <label for="widget_age" id="widget_age_label"
                     class="labels_with_errors">
                       Age
                       <span class="label_comments" id="widget_age_comment">
                           (Required)
                       </span>
                       <span class="fields_with_errors">
                           <input id="widget_age" name="age" size="3" type="text"
                             value="24" class="Textfield" />
                       </span>
                   </label>
                   <span class="error_messages" id="widget_age_errors">
                       <span class="Regex_errors" id="widget_age_error_Regex">
                           Contains digit characters.
                       </span>
                   </span>
                   <label for="widget_name" id="widget_name_label">
                       Name
                       <input id="widget_name" name="name" size="60" type="text"
                         value="sri" class="Textfield" />
                       <span class="error_messages" id="widget_name_errors"></span>
                   </label>
                   <input id="widget_ok" name="ok" type="submit" value="OK" />
               </fieldset>
           </form>

DESCRIPTION

       Create easy to maintain HTML widgets!

       Everything is optional, use validation only or just generate forms, you can embed and
       merge them later.

       The API was designed similar to other popular modules like Data::FormValidator and
       FormValidator::Simple, HTML::FillInForm is also built in (and much faster).

       This Module is very powerful, don't misuse it as a template system!

METHODS

   new
       Arguments: $name, \%attributes

       Return Value: $widget

       Create a new HTML::Widget object. The name parameter will be used as the id of the form
       created by the to_xml method.

       The "attributes" argument is equivalent to using the "attributes" method.

   action
       Arguments: $uri

       Return Value: $uri

       Get/Set the action associated with the form. The default is no action, which causes most
       browsers to submit to the current URI.

   attributes
   attrs
       Arguments: %attributes

       Arguments: \%attributes

       Return Value: $widget

       Arguments: none

       Return Value: \%attributes

       Accepts either a list of key/value pairs, or a hash-ref.

           $w->attributes( $key => $value );
           $w->attributes( { $key => $value } );

       Returns the $widget object, to allow method chaining.

       As of v1.10, passing a hash-ref no longer deletes current attributes, instead the
       attributes are added to the current attributes hash.

       This means the attributes hash-ref can no longer be emptied using "$w->attributes( { }
       );". Instead, you may use "%{ $w->attributes } = ();".

       As a special case, if no arguments are passed, the return value is a hash-ref of
       attributes instead of the object reference. This provides backwards compatibility to
       support:

           $w->attributes->{key} = $value;

       "attrs" is an alias for "attributes".

   container
       Arguments: $tag

       Return Value: $tag

       Get/Set the tag used to contain the XML output when as_xml is called on the HTML::Widget
       object.  Defaults to "form".

   element_container_class
       Arguments: $class_name

       Return Value: $class_name

       Get/Set the container_class override for all elements in this widget. If set to non-zero
       value, process will call $element->container_class($class_name) for each element. Defaults
       to not set.

       See "container_class" in HTML::Widget::Element.

   elem
   element
       Arguments: $type, $name, \%attributes

       Return Value: $element

       Add a new element to the Widget. Each element must be given at least a type.  The name is
       used to generate an id attribute on the tag created for the element, and for form-specific
       elements is used as the name attribute. The returned element object can be used to set
       further attributes, please see the individual element classes for the methods specific to
       each one.

       The "attributes" argument is equivalent to using the attributes method.

       If the element starts with a name other than "HTML::Widget::Element::", you can fully
       qualify the name by using a unary plus:

           $self->element( "+Fully::Qualified::Name", $name );

       The type can be one of the following:

       HTML::Widget::Element::Block
               my $e = $widget->element('Block');

           Add a Block element, which by default will be rendered as a "DIV".

               my $e = $widget->element('Block');
               $e->type('img');

       HTML::Widget::Element::Button
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Button', 'foo' );
               $e->value('bar');

           Add a button element.

               my $e = $widget->element( 'Button', 'foo' );
               $e->value('bar');
               $e->content('<b>arbitrary markup</b>');
               $e->type('submit');

           Add a button element which uses a "button" html tag rather than an "input" tag. The
           value of "content" is not html-escaped, so may contain html markup.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Checkbox
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Checkbox', 'foo' );
               $e->comment('(Required)');
               $e->label('Foo');
               $e->checked('checked');
               $e->value('bar');

           Add a standard checkbox element.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Fieldset
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Fieldset', 'foo' );
               $e->legend('Personal details');
               $e->element('Textfield', 'name');
               $e->element('Textarea', 'address');

           Adds a nested fieldset element, which can contain further elements.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Hidden
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Hidden', 'foo' );
               $e->value('bar');

           Add a hidden field. This field is mainly used for passing previously gathered data
           between multiple page forms.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Password
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Password', 'foo' );
               $e->comment('(Required)');
               $e->fill(1);
               $e->label('Foo');
               $e->size(23);
               $e->value('bar');

           Add a password field. This is a text field that will not show the user what they are
           typing, but show asterisks instead.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Radio
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Radio', 'foo' );
               $e->comment('(Required)');
               $e->label('Foo');
               $e->checked('checked');
               $e->value('bar');

           Add a radio button to a group. Radio buttons with the same name will work as a group.
           That is, only one item in the group will be "on" at a time.

       HTML::Widget::Element::RadioGroup
               my $e = $widget->element( 'RadioGroup', 'name' );
               $e->comment('(Required)');
               $e->label('Foo'); # Label for whole radio group
               $e->value('bar'); # Currently selected value
               $e->labels([qw/Fu Bur Garch/]); # default to ucfirst of values

           This is a shortcut to add multiple radio buttons with the same name at the same time.
           See above.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Reset
               $e = $widget->element( 'Reset', 'foo' );
               $e->value('bar');

           Create a reset button. The text on the button will default to "Reset", unless you call
           the value() method. This button resets the form to its original values.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Select
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Select', 'foo' );
               $e->comment('(Required)');
               $e->label('Foo');
               $e->size(23);
               $e->options( foo => 'Foo', bar => 'Bar' );
               $e->selected(qw/foo bar/);

           Create a dropdown  or multi-select list element with multiple options. Options are
           supplied in a key => value list, in which the keys are the actual selected IDs, and
           the values are the strings displayed in the dropdown.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Span
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Span' );
               $e->content('bar');

           Create a simple span tag, containing the given content. Spans cannot be constrained as
           they are not entry fields.

           The content may be a string, an HTML::Element object, or an array-ref of HTML::Element
           objects.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Submit
               $e = $widget->element( 'Submit', 'foo' );
               $e->value('bar');

           Create a submit button. The text on the button will default to "Submit", unless you
           call the value() method.

               $e = $widget->element( 'Submit', 'foo' );
               $e->value('bar');
               $e->src('image.png');
               $e->width(100);
               $e->height(35);

           Create an image submit button. The button will be displayed as an image, using the
           file at url "src".

       HTML::Widget::Element::Textarea
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Textarea', 'foo' );
               $e->comment('(Required)');
               $e->label('Foo');
               $e->cols(30);
               $e->rows(40);
               $e->value('bar');
               $e->wrap('wrap');

           Create a textarea field. This is a multi-line input field for text.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Textfield
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Textfield', 'foo' );
               $e->comment('(Required)');
               $e->label('Foo');
               $e->size(23);
               $e->maxlength(42);
               $e->value('bar');

           Create a single line text field.

       HTML::Widget::Element::Upload
               my $e = $widget->element( 'Upload', 'foo' );
               $e->comment('(Required)');
               $e->label('Foo');
               $e->accept('text/html');
               $e->maxlength(1000);
               $e->size(23);

           Create a field for uploading files. This will probably be rendered as a textfield,
           with a button for choosing a file.

           Adding an Upload element automatically calls "$widget->enctype('multipart/form-data')"
           for you.

   id
   name
       Arguments: $name

       Return Value: $name

       Get or set the widget id.

       "name" is an alias for "id".

   get_elements
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: @elements

           my @elements = $self->get_elements;

           my @elements = $self->get_elements( type => 'Textfield' );

           my @elements = $self->get_elements( name => 'username' );

       Returns a list of all elements added to the widget.

       If a 'type' argument is given, only returns the elements of that type.

       If a 'name' argument is given, only returns the elements with that name.

   get_elements_ref
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: \@elements

       Accepts the same arguments as "get_elements", but returns an arrayref of results instead
       of a list.

   get_element
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: $element

           my $element = $self->get_element;

           my $element = $self->get_element( type => 'Textfield' );

           my $element = $self->get_element( name => 'username' );

       Similar to get_elements(), but only returns the first element in the list.

       Accepts the same arguments as get_elements().

   find_elements
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: @elements

       Similar to "get_elements", and accepts the same arguments, but performs a recursive search
       through block-level elements.

   const
   constraint
       Arguments: $type, @field_names

       Return Value: $constraint

       Set up a constraint on one or more elements. When process() is called on the Widget
       object, with a $query object, the parameters of the query are checked against the
       specified constraints. The HTML::Widget::Constraint object is returned to allow setting of
       further attributes to be set. The string 'Not_' can be prepended to each type name to
       negate the effects. Thus checking for a non-integer becomes 'Not_Integer'.

       If the constraint package name starts with something other than
       "HTML::Widget::Constraint::", you can fully qualify the name by using a unary plus:

           $self->constraint( "+Fully::Qualified::Name", @names );

       Constraint checking is done after all HTML::Widget::Filter have been applied.

       @names should contain a list of element names that the constraint applies to.  The type of
       constraint can be one of:

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::All
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'All', 'foo', 'bar' );

           The fields passed to the "All" constraint are those which are required fields in the
           form.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::AllOrNone
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'AllOrNone', 'foo', 'bar' );

           If any of the fields passed to the "AllOrNone" constraint are filled in, then they all
           must be filled in.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Any
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Any', 'foo', 'bar' );

           At least one or more of the fields passed to this constraint must be filled.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::ASCII
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'ASCII', 'foo' );

           The fields passed to this constraint will be checked to make sure their contents
           contain ASCII characters.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Bool
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Bool', 'foo' );

           The fields passed to this constraint will be checked to make sure their contents
           contain a 1 or 0.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Callback
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Callback', 'foo' )->callback(sub {
                   my $value=shift;
                   return 1;
               });

           This constraint allows you to provide your own callback sub for validation.  The
           callback sub is called once for each submitted value of each named field.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::CallbackOnce
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'CallbackOnce', 'foo' )->callback(sub {
                   my $value=shift;
                   return 1;
               });

           This constraint allows you to provide your own callback sub for validation.  The
           callback sub is called once per call of "process".

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Date
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Date', 'year', 'month', 'day' );

           This constraint ensures that the three fields passed in are a valid date.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::DateTime
               my $c =
                 $widget->constraint( 'DateTime', 'year', 'month', 'day', 'hour',
                   'minute', 'second' );

           This constraint ensures that the six fields passed in are a valid date and time.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::DependOn
               my $c =
                 $widget->constraint( 'DependOn', 'foo', 'bar' );

           If the first field listed is filled in, all of the others are required.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Email
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Email', 'foo' );

           Check that the field given contains a valid email address, according to RFC 2822,
           using the Email::Valid module.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Equal
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Equal', 'foo', 'bar' );
               $c->render_errors( 'foo' );

           The fields passed to this constraint must contain the same information, or be empty.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::HTTP
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'HTTP', 'foo' );

           This constraint checks that the field(s) passed in are valid URLs. The regex used to
           test this can be set manually using the ->regex method.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::In
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'In', 'foo' );
               $c->in( 'possible', 'values' );

           Check that a value is one of a specified set.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Integer
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Integer', 'foo' );

           Check that the field contents are an integer.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Length
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Length', 'foo' );
               $c->min(23);
               $c->max(50);

           Ensure that the contents of the field are at least $min long, and no longer than $max.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Number
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Number', 'foo' );

           Ensure that the content of the field is a number.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Printable
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Printable', 'foo' );

           The contents of the given field must only be printable characters. The regex used to
           test this can be set manually using the ->regex method.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Range
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Range', 'foo' );
               $c->min(23);
               $c->max(30);

           The contents of the field must be numerically within the given range.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Regex
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Regex', 'foo' );
               $c->regex(qr/^\w+$/);

           Tests the contents of the given field(s) against a user supplied regex.

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::String
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'String', 'foo' );

           The field must only contain characters in \w. i.e. [a-zaZ0-9_]

       HTML::Widget::Constraint::Time
               my $c = $widget->constraint( 'Time', 'hour', 'minute', 'second' );

           The three fields passed to this constraint must constitute a valid time.

   constraint_all
   constrain_all
       Arguments: @constraint_types

       Return Value: @constraints

           $w->element( Textfield => 'name' );
           $w->element( Textfield => 'password' );
           $w->constraint_all( 'All' );

       For each named type, add a constraint to all elements currently defined.

       Does not add a constraint for elements which return false for "allow_constraint" in
       HTML::Widget::Element; this includes HTML::Widget::Element::Span and any element that
       inherits from HTML::Widget::Element::Block.

   get_constraints
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: @constraints

           my @constraints = $self->get_constraints;

           my @constraints = $self->get_constraints( type => 'Integer' );

       Returns a list of all constraints added to the widget.

       If a 'type' argument is given, only returns the constraints of that type.

   get_constraints_ref
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: \@constraints

       Accepts the same arguments as "get_constraints", but returns an arrayref of results
       instead of a list.

   get_constraint
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: $constraint

           my $constraint = $self->get_constraint;

           my $constraint = $self->get_constraint( type => 'Integer' );

       Similar to "get_constraints", but only returns the first constraint in the list.

       Accepts the same arguments as "get_constraints".

   embed
       Arguments: @widgets

       Arguments: $element, @widgets

       Insert the contents of another widget object into this one. Each embedded object will be
       represented as another set of fields (surrounded by a fieldset tag), inside the created
       form. No copy is made of the widgets to embed, thus calling as_xml on the resulting object
       will change data in the widget objects.

       With an element argument, the widgets are embedded into the provided element.  No checks
       are made on whether the provided element belongs to $self.

       Note that without an element argument, embed embeds into the top level of the widget, and
       NOT into any subcontainer (whether created by you or implicitly created).  If this is not
       what you need, you can choose one of:

           # while building $self:
           $in_here = $self->element('Fieldset', 'my_fieldset');
           # later:
           $self->embed($in_here, @widgets);

           # these are equivalent:
           $self->embed(($self->find_elements)[0], @widgets);
           $self->embed_into_first(@widgets); # but this is faster!

       If you are just building a widget and do not need to import constraints and filters from
       another widget, do not use embed at all, simply assemble using the methods provided by
       HTML::Widget::Element::Fieldset.

   embed_into_first
       Arguments: @widgets

       As for "embed", but embed into the first subcontainer (fieldset) rather than into the top
       level form.

   empty_errors
       Arguments: $bool

       Return Value: $bool

       After validation, if errors are found, a span tag is created with the id
       "fields_with_errors". Set this value to cause the span tag to always be generated.

   enctype
       Arguments: $enctype

       Return Value: $enctype

       Set/Get the encoding type of the form. This can be either
       "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" which is the default, or "multipart/form-data".  See
       <http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/interact/forms.html#h-17.13.4>.

       If the widget contains an Upload element, the enctype is automatically set to
       'multipart/form-data'.

   explicit_ids
       Argument: $bool

       Return Value: $bool

       When true; elements, fieldsets and blocks will not be given DOM id's, unless explicitly
       set with attributes.

           $w->element( 'Textfield', 'foo', {id => 'my_id'} )

       The form itself will always be given an "id", which is "widget" by default.

   filter
       Arguments: $type, @field_names

       Return Value: $filter

       Add a filter. Like constraints, filters can be applied to one or more elements.  These are
       applied to actually change the contents of the fields, supplied by the user before
       checking the constraints. It only makes sense to apply filters to fields that can contain
       text - Password, Textfield, Textarea, Upload.

       If the filter starts with a name other than "HTML::Widget::Filter::", you can fully
       qualify the name by using a unary plus:

           $self->filter( "+Fully::Qualified::Name", @names );

       There are currently two types of filter:

       HTML::Widget::Filter::Callback
               my $f = $widget->filter( 'Callback', 'foo' );
               $f->callback( \&my_callback );

           Filter given field(s) using a user-defined subroutine.

       HTML::Widget::Filter::HTMLEscape
               my $f = $widget->filter( 'HTMLEscape', 'foo' );

           Escapes HTML entities in the given field(s).

       HTML::Widget::Filter::HTMLStrip
               my $f = $widget->filter( 'HTMLStrip', 'foo' );

           Strips HTML tags from the given field(s).

               my $f = $widget->filter( 'HTMLStrip', 'foo' );
               $f->allow( 'p', 'br' );

           Specify a list of HTML tags which shouldn't be stripped.

       HTML::Widget::Filter::LowerCase
               my $f = $widget->filter( 'LowerCase', 'foo' );

           Make given field(s) all lowercase.

       HTML::Widget::Filter::TrimEdges
               my $f = $widget->filter( 'TrimEdges', 'foo' );

           Removes whitespace from the beginning and end of the given field(s).

       HTML::Widget::Filter::UpperCase
               my $f = $widget->filter( 'UpperCase', 'foo' );

           Make given field(s) all uppercase.

       HTML::Widget::Filter::Whitespace
               my $f = $widget->filter( 'Whitespace', 'foo' );

           Removes all whitespace from the given field(s).

   filter_all
       Arguments: @filter_types

       Return Value: @filters

           $w->element( Textfield => 'name' );
           $w->element( Textfield => 'age' );
           $w->filter_all( 'Whitespace' );

       For each named type, add a filter to all elements currently defined.

       Does not add a filter for elements which return false for
       "HTML::Widget::Element/allow_filter"; this includes HTML::Widget::Element::Span and any
       element that inherits from HTML::Widget::Element::Block.

   get_filters
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: @filters

           my @filters = $self->get_filters;

           my @filters = $self->get_filters( type => 'Integer' );

       Returns a list of all filters added to the widget.

       If a 'type' argument is given, only returns the filters of that type.

   get_filters_ref
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: \@filters

       Accepts the same arguments as "get_filters", but returns an arrayref of results instead of
       a list.

   get_filter
       Arguments: %options

       Return Value: $filter

           my @filters = $self->get_filter;

           my @filters = $self->get_filter( type => 'Integer' );

       Similar to "get_filters", but only returns the first filter in the list.

       Accepts the same arguments as "get_filters".

   indi
   indicator
       Arguments: $field_name

       Return Value: $field_name

       Set/Get a boolean field. This is a convenience method for the user, so they can keep track
       of which of many Widget objects were submitted. It is also used by
       Catalyst::Plugin::HTML::Widget

   legend
       Arguments: $legend

       Return Value: $legend

       Set/Get a legend for this widget. This tag is used to label the fieldset.

   merge
       Arguments: @widgets

       Arguments: $element, @widgets

       Merge elements, constraints and filters from other widgets, into this one. The elements
       will be added to the end of the list of elements that have been set already.

       Without an element argument, and with standard widgets, the contents of the first top-
       level element of each widget will be merged into the first top-level element of this
       widget.  This emulates the previous behaviour.

       With an element argument, the widgets are merged into the named element.  No checks are
       made on whether the provided element belongs to $self.

   method
       Arguments: $method

       Return Value: $method

       Set/Get the method used to submit the form. Can be set to either "post" or "get". The
       default is "post".

   result
   process
       Arguments: $query, \@uploads

       Return Value: $result

       After finishing setting up the widget and all its elements, call to create an
       HTML::Widget::Result. If passed a $query it will run filters and validation on the
       parameters. The Result object can then be used to produce the HTML.

       "result" is an alias for "process".

   query
       Arguments: $query

       Return Value: $query

       Set/Get the query object to use for validation input. The query object can also be passed
       to the process method directly.

   strict
       Arguments: $bool

       Return Value: $bool

       Only consider parameters that pass at least one constraint valid.

   subcontainer
       Arguments: $tag

       Return Value: $tag

       Set/Get the subcontainer tag to use.  Defaults to "fieldset".

   uploads
       Arguments: \@uploads

       Return Value: \@uploads

       Contains an arrayref of Apache2::Upload compatible objects.

   xhtml_strict
       Arguments: $bool

       Return Value: $bool

       When "true", it is an error to have any element at the top-level of the widget which is
       not derived from HTML::Widget::Element::Block.  Currently, the only valid element supplied
       is the HTML::Widget::Element::Fieldset.

       When "true", the top-level widget may not have a L/legend>.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

   How do I add an onSubmit handler to my form?
           $widget->attributes( onsubmit => $javascript );

       See "attributes" in HTML::Widget.

   How do I add an onChange handler to my form field?
           $element->attributes( onchange => $javascript );

       See "attributes" in HTML::Widget::Element.

   Element X does not have an accessor for Y!
       You can add any arbitrary attributes with "attributes" in HTML::Widget::Element.

   How can I add a tag which isn't included?
       You can either create your own element module files, and use them as you would a standard
       element, or alternatively...

       You can call type on a HTML::Widget::Element::Block element to change the rendered tag.

           $w->element('Block')->type('br');
           # will render as
           <br />

   How can I render some elements in a HTML list?
           my $ul = $w->element('Block')->type('ul');
           $ul->element('Block')->type('li')
               ->element( Textfield => foo' );
           $ul->element('Block')->type('li')
               ->element( Textfield => 'bar' );

           # will render as
           <ul>
           <li>
           <input class="textfield" id="widget_foo" name="foo" type="text" />
           </li>
           <li>
           <input class="textfield" id="widget_bar" name="bar" type="text" />
           </li>
           </ul>

SUPPORT

       Mailing list:

       <http://lists.rawmode.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/html-widget>

SUBVERSION REPOSITORY

       The publicly viewable subversion code repository is at
       <http://dev.catalyst.perl.org/repos/Catalyst/trunk/HTML-Widget/>.

SEE ALSO

       Catalyst Catalyst::Plugin::HTML::Widget HTML::Element

AUTHOR

       Sebastian Riedel, "sri@oook.de"

LICENSE

       This library is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same
       terms as Perl itself.