NAME HTML::FormHandler::Field::reCAPTCHA - Add a Captcha::reCAPTCHA field SYNOPSIS The following is example usage. In your HTML::FormHandler subclass, "MyApp::HTML::Forms::MyForm": has_field 'recaptcha' => ( type=>'reCAPTCHA', public_key=>'[YOUR PUBLIC KEY]', private_key=>'[YOUR PRIVATE KEY]', recaptcha_message => "You're failed to prove your Humanity!", required=>1, ); Example Catalyst controller: my $form = MyApp::HTML::Forms::MyForm->new; my $params = $c->request->body_parameters; if(my $result = $form->process(params=>$params) { ## The Form is totally valid. Go ahead with whatever is next. } else { ## Invalid results, you need to display errors and try again. } DESCRIPTION Uses Captcha::reCAPTCHA to add a "Check if the agent is human" field. You will need an account from http://recaptcha.net/ to make this work. This is a thin wrapper on top of Captcha::reCAPTCHA so you should review the docs for that. However there's not much too it, just register for an account over at http://recaptcha.org and use it. When creating an account, I'd recommend creating two, one for testing or development and is not domain locked, and another one for production which is. FIELD OPTIONS We support the following additional field options, over what is inherited from HTML::FormHandler::Field public_key The public key you get when you create an account on http://recaptcha.net/ private_key The private key you get when you create an account on http://recaptcha.net/ use_ssl control the 'use_ssl' option in Captcha::reCAPTCHA when calling 'get_html'. recaptcha_options control the 'options' option in Captcha::reCAPTCHA when calling 'get_html'. recaptcha_message What to show if the recaptcha fails. Defaults to 'Error validating reCAPTCHA'. This error message is in addition to any other constraints you add, such as 'required'. FORM METHODS The following methods or attributes can be set in the form which contains the recapcha field. $name_public_key or $name_private_key "$name" is the name you gave to the reCAPTCHA field (the word directy after the "has_field" command. You may wish to set your public key from a method or attribute contained from within the form. This would make it easier to have one form class and use configuration tools, such as what Catalyst offers, to set the pubic key. For example: ## In my form "MyApp::Form::MyForm has ['recaptcha_public_key', 'recapcha_private_key'] => ( is=>'ro', isa=>'Str', required=>1, ); has_field 'recaptcha' => ( type=>'reCAPTCHA', recaptcha_message => "You're failed to prove your Humanity!", required=>1, ); Then you might construct this in a Catalyst::Controller: my $form = MyApp::Form::MyForm->new( recaptcha_public_key => $self->controller_public_key, recaptcha_private_key => $self->controller_private_key, ); ## 'process', etc. Then your controller could populate the attributes 'controller_public_key' and 'controller_private_key' from your gloval Catalyst Configuration, allowing you to use one set of keys in development and another for production, or even use differnt keys for differnt forms if you wish. SEE ALSO The following modules or resources may be of interest. HTML::FormHandler, Captch::reCAPTCHA AUTHOR John Napiorkowski "" COPYRIGHT & LICENSE Copyright 2010, John Napiorkowski "" Original work sponsered by Shutterstock, LLC. <http://shutterstock.com> This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.