Views allows handlers to output form elements, wrapping them automatically in a form, and handling validation / submission. The form is multistep by default, allowing other modules to add additional steps, such as confirmation screens.
function render($values) { return '<!--form-item-' . $this->options['id'] . '--' . $this->view->row_index . '-->'; } function views_form(&$form, &$form_state) { // The view is empty, abort. if (empty($this->view->result)) { return; } $field_name = $this->options['id']; $form[$field_name] = array( '#tree' => TRUE, ); // At this point, the query has already been run, so we can access the results foreach ($this->view->result as $row_id => $row) { $form[$field_name][$row_id] = array( '#type' => 'textfield', '#title' => t('Your name'), '#default_value' => '', ); } } // Optional validate function. function views_form_validate($form, &$form_state) { $field_name = $this->options['id']; foreach ($form_state['values'][$field_name] as $row_id => $value) { if ($value == 'Drupal') { form_set_error($field_name . '][' . $row_id, "You can't be named Drupal. That's my name."); } } } // Optional submit function. function views_form_submit($form, &$form_state) { // Do something here }The form is multistep by default, with one step: 'views_form_views_form'. A "form_example" module could add a confirmation step by setting:
$form_state['step'] = 'form_example_confirmation';in form_example_views_form_submit(). Then, views_form would call form_example_confirmation($form, $form_state, $view, $output) to get that step. Important: You can fetch the Views object in form_alter and validate / submit hooks from the form state:
$view = $form_state['build_info']['args'][0];