We are excited to announce version 0.7.03 of CaseLocker, a maintenance release with the following new features and bug fixes.
New Features
Import Headers on Report Generation
You can now include import headers on form report generation, allowing for inline editing and re-importing of data from one spreadsheet.
Option List Importing
Need to import a list of options? Select "Import Options" in the option list editor and you can paste a new line or comma delimited list of options. You can also select a custom delimiter to split by whatever character you need to.
Duplicating Form Templates
You can now instantly create a duplicate copy of any template.
Report Archival
Reports will now archive after a set number of days. Form Reports will be archived after 30 days, while Contact File Reports will be archived after 7 days. Archival only deletes the generated report file.
Bugfixes
A number of notable bugfixes are included in this release:
- Number/Integer field answers are now capped at 9 digits
- Rerunning a report will no longer fail to run and break the report overview page
- The timeout dialog will no longer appear if you log in, but do not focus CaseLocker immediately.
- Tag slug generation has moved to the server, which fixes bugs caused by whitespace issues.
Minor Changes & Deprecations
- Contact notices are now more descriptive, such as when an email has failed to deliver or the contact is disabled.
- The "Send Invite" function has been deprecated, and the button will be removed in the next feature release. Send Invite was a legacy function introduced prior to the Messaging functionality. To "invite" a contact to CaseLocker, send a message from the Messaging area.
- Form Report Importing now supports importing 2 digit years for dates. A 2 digit year (ie 82) will be converted to the full 4 digit year. If the 2 digit year is between 00 and 5 years greater than the current year (as of this release, 2027), it will be parsed as a year in the 2000s. If it is less than 00 and greater than 27, it will be parsed as a year in the 1900s.