![]() ![]() I'm curious to know if anyone has tried FormEntry out, and what they think. For larger business applications, you can also get a Private Label version for $4,999 and white-label the whole setup. Academic pricing drops it to $19 and $39 for FormEntry and FormEntry Server. For a base price of $118, you could start rapidly developing applications and remote databases. It even handles photo uploads, which adds myriad possibilities for inventory, real estate, and insurance applications.įormEntry for Mac starts (for a single developer) at US$39, FormEntry Server at $79, and FormEntry Touch is a free download from the App Store. ![]() It has a signature field form type which allows people to use the touch screen to sign submissions, so it has legal applications as well. Teachers and professors could easily build quizzes and tests with the available array of form field types (we're looking at you, ACU). You could build a menu and ordering system for a restaurant, and let iDevice-toting customers place their orders at any time (or provide every table with an iPad, if you could justify the cost). There are a lot of possibilities for something like this, across a variety of applications. Put it all together, and it looks like a pretty great setup for rapidly creating form-based applications that interact with a central database. The universal app is static, in that it requires no coding it reads forms from the application you build with FormEntry for Mac and runs on the FormEntry Server. FormEntry Touch, a recent release from WidgetPress (makers of ModelBaker), makes setting up form-based systems on iPads and iPhones easier than ever. In member function bool cgicc::Cgicc::findEntries(const string&, bool, std::vector&) const: Cgicc.cpp:328:54: error.![]()
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