> and if I do a form_set_error(), because the elements are the same
name the red error border appears on both, but hey I can live with that.
For anyone what can't live with that, you may be interested in
http://drupal.org/node/799356.
Anth wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for the tips everyone. Worked it out, will describe what I
ended up doing in case it's useful to anyone.
Nancy and Earnie, I was using MultiBlock and the core of the problem
for me was that they *don't* change the $form_id so there is nothing
to differentiate them. Alex, yep, I'd started to look at hook_forms so
your tip was a good kick in the right direction. Lee, by the time I
got your email I'd worked it out :)
So as an example, I had to throw away MultiBlock and generate the
blocks on my own but it was pretty easy to do. My application is a
timesheet application and there is a role called 'candidate' that
needed a separate login. The only real problems I had after getting
the hang of all that is for some reason I had to shift my validation
function into the first slot (see comments in hook_form_alter) to get
it to fire, and if I do a form_set_error(), because the elements are
the same name the red error border appears on both, but hey I can live
with that.
in my hook_block:
case 'view':
$block['subject'] = 'Candidate Login';
$block['content'] = drupal_get_form('candidate_login_block');
return $block;
Now because 'candidate_login_block' doesn't exist as a function that
can be called by drupal_get_form I want drupal_get_form to be called
as drupal_get_form('user_login_block') and to make this happen I set
up a hook_forms (note, not hook_form) as below:
function timesheet_forms($form_id, $args) {
$forms['candidate_login_block']['callback'] = 'user_login_block';
return $forms;
}
This all means that in my hook_form_alter I can do:
switch($form_id) {
case 'candidate_login_block':
// $form['#validate'][] = '_timesheet_candidate_login_validate';
// The line above doesn't seem to result in my validation function
getting called so had to use the form below.
array_unshift($form['#validate'], '_timesheet_candidate_login_validate');
break;
In my function _timesheet_candidate_login_validate I can do whatever I
want to invalidate the form (I called user_load with the entered field
and checked its roles). Done.
Thanks,
Anthony.
On 14/05/2010 3:37 PM, Lee Rowlands wrote:
For a decent Hook_forms example look to ubercart’s uc_product, it
uses hook_forms to register the ‘add to cart’ forms :
http://api.lullabot.com/uc_product_forms
*>* I think the answer about using hook_forms is the way to go, but
last I looked the API docs were really bad on that hook.