Solved! Go to Solution.
You stated that your issue with using JQuery is an author cannot add questions. However - you can use a multifield dialog that lets an author enter questions into the dialog and the corresponding answer. Use JS logic to read the dialog and set the quiz using the plug-in. This way - you use JQuery and use a dialog to let an author set the questions. Using Adaptive form is not the best way to proceed with this requirement. A custom component using a plug-in and a good dialog is the way to proceed.
UPDATE: As of Jan 22, 2016 - we now have a community article that addresses this use case. See: Developing a custom Adobe Experience Manager Quiz Component.
As I said in other thread, JQUERY is best way. AEM adaptive forms are not the same as quiz functionality. You would have to overlay an adaptive form component and perform a lot of customization. I will look within Adobe to see if anyone has done something similar.
Is there any reason you have to do this using AEM forms? As Scott mentioned, there are better ways to implement this.
Regards,
Opkar
Views
Replies
Total Likes
Views
Replies
Total Likes
You stated that your issue with using JQuery is an author cannot add questions. However - you can use a multifield dialog that lets an author enter questions into the dialog and the corresponding answer. Use JS logic to read the dialog and set the quiz using the plug-in. This way - you use JQuery and use a dialog to let an author set the questions. Using Adaptive form is not the best way to proceed with this requirement. A custom component using a plug-in and a good dialog is the way to proceed.
UPDATE: As of Jan 22, 2016 - we now have a community article that addresses this use case. See: Developing a custom Adobe Experience Manager Quiz Component.
@smacdonald2008 , The link in your reply doesn't seem to go where you intended. Can you redirect me to the correct place? We are looking for a custom quiz component on our AEM site.
Views
Likes
Replies
Views
Likes
Replies
Views
Likes
Replies