Adding various types of forms to a website is often required. Unfortunately, it’s also a job that can’t be performed with ease if no specialized tools are used. Formoid is one of those specialized tools. It makes creating web forms a simple and easy job that can be performed by anyone.
Formoid makes creating web forms a job that even complete beginners can perform, as it allows creating the forms in a visual manner, without involving any complicated coding or programming. The intuitive and straightforward interface allows adding elements (buttons, text areas, check boxes, anti-spam captcha, etc.) into a web form with ease, using drag-and-drop.
It supports pure CSS styling and it comes with some cool-looking skins that ensure that your forms will not only work flawlessly, but they will also look great. The layout, the colors, and the style of the forms can be easily customized to your liking. The changes performed to the forms can be previewed in real-time. As you can see, Formoid is not only easy-to-use, but also feature-rich and powerful, providing complete control over the generated forms.
To sum it all up, Formoid is worth a try. It’s one of the handiest solutions that one could ever find for easily creating web forms.
Comments (2)
Their so-called one year of support service is a complete lie. Their 2 support agents only shoot back irrelevant pat responses: ask you to make sure the server runs PHP when you just gave them a link to their form where the PHP is running on your server, asking you to give them a link when you've already given them three, telling you that you can't test it on your PC when you just gave them three links to it running live on your server, asking you to send everything you have uploaded so that they can look at the code and then never addressing that again, so forth and so on until they finally just stopped replying.
The so-called unlimited license they sell you is actually very limited. The software will only send to one address per form. And if you try to change it to the address in a paid version of the software, the software reverts back to freeware mode. That's far from an "unlimited commercial license" in my book.