Process events initiate automatically as
the result of an internal process or action related to a form or
objects on a form. These events initiate immediately following significant
form changes; for example, after a form design is merged with data
or after the form pagination process finishes. Process events also initiate
immediately after interactive events initiate. For example, immediately after
any interactive event initiates, the calculate event
initiates followed by the validate event.
The following list contains the process events, which are available
from the Show list in the Script Editor:
calculate
form:ready
indexChange
initialize
layout:ready
validate
Process events can initiate
many times as a result of dependencies; that is, actions associated
with a single event that ultimately initiates one or more additional
events. Using an example of a form filler clicking a button to reveal a
previously hidden portion of the form, after the form filler clicks
the button, not only does a series of interactive and processing
events initiate for the button itself, but a number of process events
for the new subform initiates as well.
The following image
represents the general flow of events leading up to a PDF form opening
in Acrobat or Adobe Reader.
After
the form opens in Acrobat or Adobe Reader, these process events
may still initiate as the result of changes made to the form. For
example, the calculate, validate,
and layout:ready events for an object initiate immediately
after some interactive events occur; therefore, calculations and scripts
attached to the processing events will run multiple times.
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