4.0
Table Of Contents
- Chapter 1
- Chapter 2
- Chapter 3
- Chapter 4
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
- Chapter 8
- Chapter 9
- Glossary
- Welcome
- Installation and Setup
- Form Usage
- OmniForm Procedures
- Designing a Form
- The Design Process
- The Design View Window
- The Design View Toolbars
- Creating Objects on a Form
- General Creation Guidelines
- Creating a Text Object
- Creating a Line Object
- Creating an Oval Object
- Creating a Rectangle Object
- Adding Graphics to Your Form
- Creating a Fill Text Object
- Creating a Comb Object
- Creating a Check Box Object
- Creating a Circle Text Object
- Creating a Table Object
- Creating a Fill Graphic Object
- Defining Objects on a Form
- Changing Object Appearance on a Form
- Adding Color to a Form
- Adjusting Colors
- Editing a Form
- Advanced Features
- Filling a Form
- Managing an OmniForm Database
- Using Calculations
- Technical Information
Filling Fields
Filling a Form 163
Check boxes are commonly used for
Yes/No
questions and for selecting
an item in a group, as in the two examples below:
Check boxes may be
grouped;
this means that only one can be selected.
Selecting one check box automatically deselects another checked box in
the group as in the example below.
To move through grouped check boxes, use the arrow key on your
keyboard.
Circle Text
Click a circle text field to fill it. A border appears around the filled field.
A circle text field can contain text and other characters, or it can function
much like a check box (see the previous section “Check Box”).
Table
A table field consists of individual
cells
. Table cells are fill text fields by
default. Enter characters in these cells just as you would in fill text fields.
A table cell can also contain any other type of field, even multiple fields
of the same or different types. In the example below, the table cells on
the right contain check box fields.
Check Fill