=== WP-FormAssembly === Contributors: FormAssembly / Drew Buschhorn Tags: forms Requires at least: 4.0.0 Tested up to: 6.7 Stable tag: 3.0.2 Quickly embed FormAssembly web forms with the FormAssembly WordPress Plugin! Create contact forms, applications, payment forms, & surveys. == Description == Quickly embed FormAssembly web forms into your website with the FormAssembly WordPress Plugin! Use FormAssembly's all-in-one form builder and data collection platform to: Create contact forms, applications, payment forms, and surveys. Integrate data with Salesforce, PayPal, Google Apps and more. Keep data secure with GDPR/CCPA compliance, PCI DSS Level 1 Certification, and encryption at rest. Sign up for a free trial at FormAssembly.com/sign-up to start building your form, then use the plugin and shortcode to embed forms onto your WordPress site. == Installation == Shortcodes Replace 123456 with your form ID. Learn more: https://help.formassembly.com/knowledgebase/articles/340363-wordpress Example shortcode for Basic, Professional, & Premier plans: [formassembly formid=123456] Shortcode for Essentials, Team or Enterprise plans: [formassembly formid=123456 shortname=”organization”] Shortcode for Government plans: [formassembly formid=123456 shortname=”organization.gov”] To use this plugin, you will need a FormAssembly account. = Example Shortcodes = FormAssembly Basic, Professional, & Premier plans – (tfaforms.com): [formassembly formid=123456] FormAssembly Essentials, Team or Enterprise plans – (organization.tfaforms.net): [formassembly formid=123456 shortname=”organization”] Government plans – (organization.govfa.net): [formassembly formid=123456 shortname=”organization.gov”] Publish with an iframe - (Inline Frame): If you'd rather display the form in an inline frame, or if your server doesn't support the default publishing method, add the iframe attribute to your tag. For instance, a benefit to using an iframe would be to avoid conflicting CSS rules between the parent site and the embedded form. [formassembly formid=123456 iframe=1] OR [formassembly formid=123456 shortname="organization" iframe=1] Publish a Legacy Workflow: [formassembly workflowid=1234] Add Style: It is possible to add CSS to your shortcode to control the size of the form/iframe in the page. For example, you can define the width: [formassembly formid=123456 iframe=1 style="width: 300px !important;"] https://help.formassembly.com/knowledgebase/articles/340363-wordpress 1. Upload wp_formassembly.zip to the `/wp-content/plugins/` directory 1. Activate the plugin through the 'Plugins' menu in WordPress 1. Place [formassembly formid=NNNN] shortcode in your post. == Changelog == = 3.0.1 = * Update documentation = 3.0.0 = * Security improvements * Dropped support/use of custom domain in server shortcode * Introduced shortname shortcode * Bump 'Tested up to' version = 2.0.11 = * XSS security fix = 2.0.10 = * Security improvements = 2.0.9 = * Security improvements = 2.0.8 = * Bump 'Tested up to' version * Fix plugin version * Use WP HTTP API instead of cURL * Security improvements = 2.0.7 = * Bump 'Tested up to' version = 2.0.6 = * Security Updates = 2.0.5 = * Support iframed forms in Safari. = 2.0.4 = * Update formatting and tested compatibility version. = 2.0.3 = * Update contributor name. = 2.0.2 = * Defaults to https, not http. = 2.0.1 = * Updated plugin description with single bracket shortcode example. = 2.0 = * Updated release for WordPress shortcodes. * Uses single bracket, but try to keep backwards compatibility with double bracket notation for now. = 1.0 = * Initial release. * Uses double bracket notation.