CSM 10.4 Documentation

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Standard Form Controls

A standard control is a form control that enhances form design and data entry.

CSM provides the following standard controls:

  • Banner: Displays a title (text) and image (example: Company name and logo, title and icon, permanent contact information, etc.).
  • Button: Executes a single Action when clicked (example: Open a rich text Zoom window, launch a Visualization, view related Knowledge Articles, move to the next form in a multi-form process, etc.).
  • Group Box/Tabbed Group Box: Organizes other controls in containers to enhance a form's appearance and usability.
  • Image: Displays a custom image (example: Company logo, team icon, personal photo, etc.).
  • Label: Textually identifies or enhances other form elements. Often, a label is tied to and identifies a field control.
  • Link Label: Executes a single Action when clicked (example: Move a record through a workflow, send a customer e-mail, submit resolution details to the Knowledge Base, etc.).
  • List Box: Displays multiple values from which a user can select (example: Call sources, list of services, distribution list, etc.).
  • Radio Button: Presents a list of choices and stores a value for the selection (example: Show all tabs or just related tabs in a form arrangement, toggle between embedded forms, etc.).
  • Shapes (Ellipse, Line, and Rectangle): Organizes other controls to enhance a form's appearance and usability.

The following figure shows the standard form controls on a form.

Standard Form Controls

Good to know:

  • By default, a standard control's font, colors (background, foreground, and border), border style, and background style properties come from the defined form theme; however you can define your own properties, if needed.
  • Image controls do not support text, background, foreground, or border colors; therefore no colors, styles, or fonts can be applied.
  • To include an ampersand character (&) in a label or link label control, enter two ampersands (&&). One ampersand is used to designate a keyboard accelerator, so entering a double ampersand escapes the accelerator and ensures that a single ampersand is displayed.
  • After a standard form control is added to a form, you can define how the control looks and behaves on the form (example: Size, alignment, visibility, etc.).

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