parkerdavis avatar
parkerdavis
docFeedbackForm
HTTP
Val Town Docs Feedback Form & Handler Live form Val Town Docs YouTube tutorial that explains v17 of this val This feedback form is linked on our docs site. This val renders an HTML form, including pre-fills the user's email address if they've submitted the form in the past (via a cookie), and pre-fills the URL by grabbing it out of the query params. It handles form submissions, including parsing the form, saving the data into @stevekrouse.docsFeedback , a private JSON val, and then returns a thank you message, and set's the user's email address as a cookie, to save them some keystrokes the next time they fill out the form. Another val, @stevekrouse.formFeedbackAlert , polls on an interval for new form submissions, and if it finds any, forwards them on a private Val Town discord channel. There are a number of subtleties to the way each of some features are implemented. A user submitted three pieces of feedback in quick succession, so I thought it'd be nice if we remembered user's email addresses after their first form submissions. There are classically two ways to do this, cookies or localstorage. I choose cookies. It requires setting them in the response header and getting them out of the request header. I used a Deno library to parse the cookie but I set it manually because that seemed simpler. You may be wondering about how I'm getting the referrer out of the query params instead of from the HTTP Referrer header. I tried that at first, but it's increasingly difficult to get path data from it due to more restrictive security policies . So instead I decided to include the URL data in a query param. I get it there via this script in my blog's site: function updateFeedback(ref) { let feedback = [...document.getElementsByTagName('a')].find(e => e.innerText == 'Feedback') feedback.setAttribute('href', "https://stevekrouse-docfeedbackform.web.val.run/?ref=" + ref) } setTimeout(() => updateFeedback(document.location.href), 100); navigation.addEventListener('navigate', e => updateFeedback(e.destination.url)); Finally, you may be wondering why I queue up feedback in @stevekrouse.docsFeedback , a private JSON val, and then process it via @stevekrouse.formFeedbackAlert instead of sending it along to Discord directly in this val. I tried that originally but it felt too slow to wait for the API call to Discord before returning the "Thanks for your feedback" message. This is where the context.waitUntil method (that Cloudflare workers and Vercel Edge Functions support) would really come in handy – those allow you to return a Response, and then continue to compute. Currently Val Town requires you to stop all compute with the returning of your Response, so the only way to compute afterwards is to queue it up for another val to take over, and that's what I'm doing here.
Forked from stevekrouse/docFeedbackForm
stevekrouse avatar
stevekrouse
docFeedbackForm
HTTP
Val Town Docs Feedback Form & Handler Live form Val Town Docs YouTube tutorial that explains v17 of this val This feedback form was linked on our docs site. This val renders an HTML form, including pre-fills the user's email address if they've submitted the form in the past (via a cookie), and pre-fills the URL by grabbing it out of the query params. It handles form submissions, including parsing the form, saving the data into @stevekrouse.docsFeedback , a private JSON val, and then returns a thank you message, and set's the user's email address as a cookie, to save them some keystrokes the next time they fill out the form. Another val, @stevekrouse.formFeedbackAlert , polls on an interval for new form submissions, and if it finds any, forwards them on a private Val Town discord channel. There are a number of subtleties to the way each of some features are implemented. A user submitted three pieces of feedback in quick succession, so I thought it'd be nice if we remembered user's email addresses after their first form submissions. There are classically two ways to do this, cookies or localstorage. I choose cookies. It requires setting them in the response header and getting them out of the request header. I used a Deno library to parse the cookie but I set it manually because that seemed simpler. You may be wondering about how I'm getting the referrer out of the query params instead of from the HTTP Referrer header. I tried that at first, but it's increasingly difficult to get path data from it due to more restrictive security policies . So instead I decided to include the URL data in a query param. I get it there via this script in my blog's site: function updateFeedback(ref) { let feedback = [...document.getElementsByTagName('a')].find(e => e.innerText == 'Feedback') feedback.setAttribute('href', "https://stevekrouse-docfeedbackform.web.val.run/?ref=" + ref) } setTimeout(() => updateFeedback(document.location.href), 100); navigation.addEventListener('navigate', e => updateFeedback(e.destination.url)); Finally, you may be wondering why I queue up feedback in @stevekrouse.docsFeedback , a private JSON val, and then process it via @stevekrouse.formFeedbackAlert instead of sending it along to Discord directly in this val. I tried that originally but it felt too slow to wait for the API call to Discord before returning the "Thanks for your feedback" message. This is where the context.waitUntil method (that Cloudflare workers and Vercel Edge Functions support) would really come in handy – those allow you to return a Response, and then continue to compute. Currently Val Town requires you to stop all compute with the returning of your Response, so the only way to compute afterwards is to queue it up for another val to take over, and that's what I'm doing here.
Forked from stevekrouse/form
1
timlin avatar
timlin
docFeedbackForm
HTTP
Val Town Docs Feedback Form & Handler Live form Val Town Docs YouTube tutorial that explains v17 of this val This feedback form is linked on our docs site. This val renders an HTML form, including pre-fills the user's email address if they've submitted the form in the past (via a cookie), and pre-fills the URL by grabbing it out of the query params. It handles form submissions, including parsing the form, saving the data into @stevekrouse.docsFeedback , a private JSON val, and then returns a thank you message, and set's the user's email address as a cookie, to save them some keystrokes the next time they fill out the form. Another val, @stevekrouse.formFeedbackAlert , polls on an interval for new form submissions, and if it finds any, forwards them on a private Val Town discord channel. There are a number of subtleties to the way each of some features are implemented. A user submitted three pieces of feedback in quick succession, so I thought it'd be nice if we remembered user's email addresses after their first form submissions. There are classically two ways to do this, cookies or localstorage. I choose cookies. It requires setting them in the response header and getting them out of the request header. I used a Deno library to parse the cookie but I set it manually because that seemed simpler. You may be wondering about how I'm getting the referrer out of the query params instead of from the HTTP Referrer header. I tried that at first, but it's increasingly difficult to get path data from it due to more restrictive security policies . So instead I decided to include the URL data in a query param. I get it there via this script in my blog's site: function updateFeedback(ref) { let feedback = [...document.getElementsByTagName('a')].find(e => e.innerText == 'Feedback') feedback.setAttribute('href', "https://stevekrouse-docfeedbackform.web.val.run/?ref=" + ref) } setTimeout(() => updateFeedback(document.location.href), 100); navigation.addEventListener('navigate', e => updateFeedback(e.destination.url)); Finally, you may be wondering why I queue up feedback in @stevekrouse.docsFeedback , a private JSON val, and then process it via @stevekrouse.formFeedbackAlert instead of sending it along to Discord directly in this val. I tried that originally but it felt too slow to wait for the API call to Discord before returning the "Thanks for your feedback" message. This is where the context.waitUntil method (that Cloudflare workers and Vercel Edge Functions support) would really come in handy – those allow you to return a Response, and then continue to compute. Currently Val Town requires you to stop all compute with the returning of your Response, so the only way to compute afterwards is to queue it up for another val to take over, and that's what I'm doing here.
Forked from stevekrouse/docFeedbackForm
1
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Updated: October 23, 2023