The audience for Professional InfoPath 2003 is the professional corporate developer with programming experience. This can include Word, Access, and Excel VBA developers and corporate XML programmers. This is purely a corporate market as Microsoft plans to only distribute InfoPath to the large corporate Office license customers, who incidentally, make up the vast majority of Office licensees.
Contents
Introduction.
Chapter 1: About InfoPath.
Chapter 2: Form Template Architecture.
Chapter 3: Key Form Elements.
Chapter 4: Meta Data Elements.
Chapter 5: Integrating Secondary Data Sources.
Chapter 6: Adding Business Logic.
Chapter 7: Back-End Services.
Chapter 8: Component Types and Controls.
Chapter 9: Upgrading Forms.
Chapter 10: Security.
Chapter 11: Customizing Forms.
Chapter 12: Introducing the Case Study.
Chapter 13: Input Data Structures.
Chapter 14: Implementing the Template.
Chapter 15: ADO Scripts for Rates.
Chapter 16: ADO Scripts for Posting.
Chapter 17: Output Data Structures.
Appendix A: InfoPath XSF Schema.
Appendix B: InfoPath Form Definition Reference.
Appendix C: InfoPath Object Model Reference.
Appendix D: References.
Glossary.
Index.