Print Endorser Conditional with airSlate SignNow

Get rid of paper and automate digital document processing for more performance and countless opportunities. Sign anything from your home, quick and accomplished. Enjoy the best way of running your business with airSlate SignNow.

Award-winning eSignature solution

Send my document for signature

Get your document eSigned by multiple recipients.
Send my document for signature

Sign my own document

Add your eSignature
to a document in a few clicks.
Sign my own document

Do more on the web with a globally-trusted eSignature platform

Standout signing experience

You can make eSigning workflows user-friendly, fast, and productive for your clients and employees. Get your documents signed in a matter of minutes

Robust reporting and analytics

Real-time accessibility along with instant notifications means you’ll never miss a thing. View stats and document progress via detailed reporting and dashboards.

Mobile eSigning in person and remotely

airSlate SignNow lets you sign on any device from any place, regardless if you are working remotely from home or are in person at the office. Every eSigning experience is versatile and easy to customize.

Industry rules and compliance

Your electronic signatures are legally binding. airSlate SignNow guarantees the top-level conformity with US and EU eSignature laws and supports market-specific regulations.

Print endorser conditional, quicker than ever before

airSlate SignNow offers a print endorser conditional function that helps simplify document workflows, get agreements signed quickly, and operate seamlessly with PDFs.

Useful eSignature extensions

Take advantage of simple-to-install airSlate SignNow add-ons for Google Docs, Chrome browser, Gmail, and more. Access airSlate SignNow’s legally-binding eSignature functionality with a mouse click

See airSlate SignNow eSignatures in action

Create secure and intuitive eSignature workflows on any device, track the status of documents right in your account, build online fillable forms – all within a single solution.

Try airSlate SignNow with a sample document

Complete a sample document online. Experience airSlate SignNow's intuitive interface and easy-to-use tools
in action. Open a sample document to add a signature, date, text, upload attachments, and test other useful functionality.

sample
Checkboxes and radio buttons
sample
Request an attachment
sample
Set up data validation

airSlate SignNow solutions for better efficiency

Keep contracts protected
Enhance your document security and keep contracts safe from unauthorized access with dual-factor authentication options. Ask your recipients to prove their identity before opening a contract to print endorser conditional.
Stay mobile while eSigning
Install the airSlate SignNow app on your iOS or Android device and close deals from anywhere, 24/7. Work with forms and contracts even offline and print endorser conditional later when your internet connection is restored.
Integrate eSignatures into your business apps
Incorporate airSlate SignNow into your business applications to quickly print endorser conditional without switching between windows and tabs. Benefit from airSlate SignNow integrations to save time and effort while eSigning forms in just a few clicks.
Generate fillable forms with smart fields
Update any document with fillable fields, make them required or optional, or add conditions for them to appear. Make sure signers complete your form correctly by assigning roles to fields.
Close deals and get paid promptly
Collect documents from clients and partners in minutes instead of weeks. Ask your signers to print endorser conditional and include a charge request field to your sample to automatically collect payments during the contract signing.
Collect signatures
24x
faster
Reduce costs by
$30
per document
Save up to
40h
per employee / month

Our user reviews speak for themselves

illustrations persone
Kodi-Marie Evans
Director of NetSuite Operations at Xerox
airSlate SignNow provides us with the flexibility needed to get the right signatures on the right documents, in the right formats, based on our integration with NetSuite.
illustrations reviews slider
illustrations persone
Samantha Jo
Enterprise Client Partner at Yelp
airSlate SignNow has made life easier for me. It has been huge to have the ability to sign contracts on-the-go! It is now less stressful to get things done efficiently and promptly.
illustrations reviews slider
illustrations persone
Megan Bond
Digital marketing management at Electrolux
This software has added to our business value. I have got rid of the repetitive tasks. I am capable of creating the mobile native web forms. Now I can easily make payment contracts through a fair channel and their management is very easy.
illustrations reviews slider
walmart logo
exonMobil logo
apple logo
comcast logo
facebook logo
FedEx logo
be ready to get more

Why choose airSlate SignNow

  • Free 7-day trial. Choose the plan you need and try it risk-free.
  • Honest pricing for full-featured plans. airSlate SignNow offers subscription plans with no overages or hidden fees at renewal.
  • Enterprise-grade security. airSlate SignNow helps you comply with global security standards.
illustrations signature

Your step-by-step guide — print endorser conditional

Access helpful tips and quick steps covering a variety of airSlate SignNow’s most popular features.

Using airSlate SignNow’s eSignature any business can speed up signature workflows and eSign in real-time, delivering a better experience to customers and employees. print endorser conditional in a few simple steps. Our mobile-first apps make working on the go possible, even while offline! Sign documents from anywhere in the world and close deals faster.

Follow the step-by-step guide to print endorser conditional:

  1. Log in to your airSlate SignNow account.
  2. Locate your document in your folders or upload a new one.
  3. Open the document and make edits using the Tools menu.
  4. Drag & drop fillable fields, add text and sign it.
  5. Add multiple signers using their emails and set the signing order.
  6. Specify which recipients will get an executed copy.
  7. Use Advanced Options to limit access to the record and set an expiration date.
  8. Click Save and Close when completed.

In addition, there are more advanced features available to print endorser conditional. Add users to your shared workspace, view teams, and track collaboration. Millions of users across the US and Europe agree that a solution that brings everything together in a single holistic workspace, is exactly what companies need to keep workflows functioning easily. The airSlate SignNow REST API allows you to embed eSignatures into your app, website, CRM or cloud. Try out airSlate SignNow and enjoy faster, smoother and overall more effective eSignature workflows!

How it works

Access the cloud from any device and upload a file
Edit & eSign it remotely
Forward the executed form to your recipient

airSlate SignNow features that users love

Speed up your paper-based processes with an easy-to-use eSignature solution.

Edit PDFs
online
Generate templates of your most used documents for signing and completion.
Create a signing link
Share a document via a link without the need to add recipient emails.
Assign roles to signers
Organize complex signing workflows by adding multiple signers and assigning roles.
Create a document template
Create teams to collaborate on documents and templates in real time.
Add Signature fields
Get accurate signatures exactly where you need them using signature fields.
Archive documents in bulk
Save time by archiving multiple documents at once.
be ready to get more

Get legally-binding signatures now!

FAQs

Here is a list of the most common customer questions. If you can’t find an answer to your question, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us.

Need help? Contact support

What active users are saying — print endorser conditional

Get access to airSlate SignNow’s reviews, our customers’ advice, and their stories. Hear from real users and what they say about features for generating and signing docs.

airSlate SignNow helps you
5
Verified User

We use airSlate SignNow to sign contracts or legal documents within the company. I originally began using this software when I joined the company and found it very easy to use.

Allows for the safe and secure signing of important documents. Allows for the storage of important documents. Easily works on mobile devices without a hiccup.

airSlate SignNow works perfectly when securely sending or receiving documentation to be signed by others. I have used airSlate SignNow within my company as well as outside with other companies to sign various types of documents. I have never had any issues with the software and find that it works perfectly on a laptop or mobile device.

Read full review
Remove friction in your form signing process!
5
Verified User

I use airSlate SignNow to gain media release from talent before filming interviews with them. It helps to ensure that we secure permission to use their image and likeness before we even start filming. It allows us to circumnavigate the paper process by digitally exchanging the release, allowing clients more ease in signing and returning the form (removes friction).

Removes friction from the form fill process. Effortless sharing via email. Templates help to repeat the process regularly.

airSlate SignNow is great for signing basic forms. I have never tried to use it for this, but I would imagine that it would be more difficult to use for more complex forms with multiple pages.

Read full review
Great product!
5
Jeremie Warner

What do you like best?

Easy of use, zapier integration, and price point!!

Read full review
video background

Print caller conditional

hey there how's it going everybody in this video we'll be learning about conditionals and how we can control what statements get executed depending on whether certain values evaluate to true or false and we've mentioned in previous videos that these true and false values are called boolean z' so let's look at one of the simplest conditionals that we can write so we're going to write an if statement and we'll say if and now the condition that we want to check whether it evaluates to true or false so we're just going to make this obvious for now and just say true then we'll put in a colon and hit enter and now in the next line we want to be sure that we're indented over so that we're writing code within our if block so now we'll just print out a string here and I'll just say conditional was true so now if I save that and run it then we can see that it printed out that our condition was true now this print statement will only be executed if the condition after our if statement evaluates to true so what if I was to instead change this over to false now if I run this and we can see that it didn't print out the statement within our if block now conditionals are usually not hard-coded to true and false values like this we really want to put in some code that evaluates to true or false so for example I'm going to create a variable here and I'll just call this variable language and I'll set this equal to Python so now let's say that we only want to execute this print statement if the language is equal to Python so to do this we can say if language equals equals Python now notice that we have a double equals here so this tests for equality now this is different from the single equal sign which is for assigning values so with this double equals here we're testing for equality and this will evaluate to true or false and that will determine if the code in our if statement is executed so if we run this then we can see that it executed our print statement that the condition was true now there are a lot of different comparisons that we can test for and I've got these written out and a snippets file here so I'm just going to copy these and paste them in so that we have them as a reference now we went over some of these and our numbers tutorial but let's go ahead and just look through here really quick so double equals test for equality exclamation point equals test if something is not equal greater than sign is for greater than less than sign is for less than greater than equal to is for greater than or equal to less than equal to is for less or equal and then we have this object identity now some people wonder what the difference is between this and the double equal signs but when we use this is keyword check we're actually checking if values have the same ID or basically whether they're the same object in memory and we're going to look at an example of this in just a bit but right now let's move on to else statements so what if we wanted to execute one portion of our code if our language was equal to Python but another portion of our code if it wasn't so to do this we're going to use an else statement so first I'm going to change my print statement here and just print this to say that the language is Python and now we want to execute some code if the language is not equal to Python so to do this we're just going to put in an else statement and make sure that your else is back here on our base line and not within our if statement so now we'll say else and now within our else block we will print out a string that just says no match so now if we run this we can see that it printed out that the language is Python so our check if the language is equal to Python is evaluating to true so it's printing the code within that block and since it meets that conditional and never executes the code within our else block now if I was instead to change this language and set that equal to Java and rerun this and we can see that it didn't meet the conditional for our if statement so that evaluated to false so then it dropped down to our else statement and executed that code okay so what if we wanted to check for multiple languages and execute different code for each one that we encountered so this is where an l-lift statement comes in so let's say that we wanted to check if the language was equal to Python and if it wasn't then we wanted to check if it was equal to Java and if it was neither of those then we would just print out no match so we'll add our additional check after our if statement by putting in an L if and again make sure that you're inventing is back to this base level because we're no longer in the if block so now I'm just going to copy this code here and say if the language is equal to Java and put in our colon and then we'll grab this and just say print language is Java so basically what this is saying is if the language is equal to Python then execute this code if it's not then run a second conditional and see if it's equal to Java and if it is then run this code and if none of those conditionals are met and print no match so now if we run this then we can see that it executed the print statement that the language is Java and none of these other statements were executed now if you're coming from another language you might be wondering if python has a switch case statement now if you don't know what a switch case statement is then it's not a big deal basically it's just a way to check multiple values and Python doesn't have a switch case and the reason is because the if LF and else statements are plenty clean enough to do this already so if we wanted to check another language then we could just keep adding LF statements so if I wanted to add a JavaScript check to the list and I could just come down here if I copy all of this then I could just do another test here for JavaScript and then say if the language is JavaScript and execute this code here and this basically gives us the same functionality as a switch case from another language okay so now I'm going to remove some code here so that we can take a look at another example now in addition to these comparisons that we have here we also have some boolean operations that we can use and these are and or and not so for example let me create two variables here and I'll call one of these user and set this equal to a string of admin and then I'll create a another variable here called logged in and I'll set that equal to true now let's say that we only wanted to execute some code if the user is equal to add and logged in is equal to true now to do this we can use the and keyword so I could say if user equal equals admin and then we'll use this and keyword and logged in and now we can ride the code if this is true so I'll just print out a string that says admin page and now we can put in an else block and then for the else block I'll just say if neither of these are true then print out the string that just says bad creds for credentials and let me bring this down just a little bit here and just to give us a little bit of extra room I'm actually going to delete these comparison comments up here that we have as a reference but I will have a link to these to the github page so that you can download those if you want to have those as a reference okay so now if we run the code that we currently have and we can see that it printed out our admin page because both of those evaluated to true our user is equal to admin and our login is equal to true but if I changed our logged in variable to false and rerun this we can see that it executes our bad credentials statement because both of these didn't evaluate to true so this user equals admin evaluated to true but log n was equal to false so and make sure that both of these have to be true now if we only care if one of these evaluate to true then we can use the or keyword so I could change this and to an or and now if I run this then you can see that it printed out our admin page statement because that evaluated to true because only one or the other needed to be true and our user was equal to admin so it didn't matter if the logged in was false or not because it only had to be one or the other now this not operation is just used to switch a boolean so it'll change a true to a false and a false to a true so for example if we were to say if not logged in then we will print a string here that just says please log in and else print welcome so we can see that currently our logged in value is equal to false now when we say not logged in then it will evaluate to true because this not just switches that false to a true now I know that that can sound a little confusing but basically you can just think of it as saying not false if not false which would evaluate true so if we run this then it prints out please login because not logged in evaluated to true so it ran what was in our if statement so when I had the conditionals pulled up here as a reference before so now I'm in my snippets here we remember that we had this object identity with this is keyword and I said that we've looked at the difference between that and the double equals which tests for equality now like I said before that object identity test if two objects have the same ID which basically means if they're the same object in memory so two objects can actually be equal and not be the same object in memory so for example let me create two different lists here so I'll just call one list equal to a and I'll put in the values of one two three another list equal to B and put in the values 1 2 3 and now I will print out a double equals B so this should evaluate to true because these two lists are equal so if we run this then we can see that we got true which is what we would expect because a and B are equal but instead if we say a is B and then we run this then that returns false now the reason is because these are two different objects in memory and we can print out these locations with this built-in ID function so right above printing that a is B I'm also going to print out the ID of a and I will also print out the ID of B so I'll save that and run it and we can see that these IDs are different so really this is comparison is really checking whether these IDs are the same so up here instead of creating a new list if I just said B equals a and save that and now we can see that the ID of a and iid of B are the same and then when we print a is B that evaluates to true because now these are the same object in memory and if I check equality then they're also equal so that's basically the difference there behind the scenes the is comparison if you say a is B it's really the same as saying I D of a equals equals the ID of B so if I run that that's equal to true that's basically what the is operator does okay so basically now all the conditionals that we looked at completely depend on what Python evaluates to true or false so let's see what all Python evaluates to true or false and there are a few things that may be unexpected to us so I have a couple of things pulled up here in my snippets and let me grab these really fast so to determine what Python evaluates to true and false it's easier to show everything that evaluates to false and then everything else will by default evaluate to true and we have a quick if else statement here to test all of these so we're going to make a few different conditions here and if that condition evaluates to true we'll print out evaluate its true else evaluated to false and my comments here are all the things in Python that evaluate to false values so the first one is the most obvious if we set a conditional equal to false then it's going to evaluate to false and this one would include all the comparison operations that we just saw so they would return true or false so if I run this then we can see that obviously our conditional evaluated to false here since we set our condition equal to false now the next value in our list here is none so none actually evaluates to false as well so if we put that value in as our conditional and run this and we can see that with our condition equal to none that that condition also evaluates to false now this next one here isn't always so obvious so if you have a numeric data type and pass it into a conditional then zero will die wait to false so if we set this condition equal to zero and run this that we can see that that evaluated to false but if we set this to any other number so if our condition is 10 instead of zero and run that and we can see that that evaluated to true so that's something to keep in mind there when working with numbers because you don't want to accidentally pass in a zero that you think would be true but it evaluates to false okay so moving on down the list if we have any empty syncwords and pass it into a conditional then that will evaluate to false so this can be an empty string an empty list and in the tuple so for example if I just set this condition to an empty list and run this and we can see that that evaluates to false and if you have an empty string that evaluates to false also and now lastly here in our list empty mapping so an empty mapping which is basically an empty dictionary this evaluates to false as well so if I pass in an empty dictionary here and run this and we continue at that empty dictionary also evaluated to false now knowing these types of things can be useful because let's say that you have a function or something that is supposed to return some values now sometimes it's needed to check if those values are actually there so you could just pass in these sequences into a conditional to check whether a string is empty or a dictionary is empty and you don't actually have to call any specific method you can just pass in the empty sequence or the empty dictionary and it will evaluate the true or false if that is empty now there are also some user-defined classes that can evaluate to false but these are the majority of the conditions that will be checking so now that we know everything that evaluates to false and everything else is obviously going to evaluate to true so you know for example just to do another example here if I set this condition equal to a string that just says test now an empty string would evaluate to false so if we ask that in that we can see that that a string with some characters evaluated the truth so that's really important when working with these conditionals is just having an idea of what is going to evaluate the true and what's going to evaluate to fall okay so I think that is going to do it for this video I hope now everyone has a clear understanding of how these conditionals work and all the different ways that Python determines what values are true and false now in the next video we'll be learning about loops and iterations but if anyone has any questions about what we covered in this video then feel free to ask in the comment section below and I'll do my best to answer those now if you enjoyed these tutorials and would like to support them and there are several ways you can do that the easiest way is to simply like the video and give it a thumbs up and also it's a huge help to share these videos with anyone who you think would find them useful and if you have the means you can contribute through patreon and there's a link to that page in the description section below be sure to subscribe for future videos and thank you all for watching you

Show more

Frequently asked questions

Learn everything you need to know to use airSlate SignNow eSignatures like a pro.

See more airSlate SignNow How-Tos

What is an electronic and digital signature?

To understand the difference between a signature stamp and electronic signature, let’s consider what electronic signatures and signature stamps are. An electronic signature is a digital analogy to a handwritten signature, while a signature stamp is created using a method called hashing to formulate a unique private and public key. Both are legally binding. However, electronic signatures are much more convenient from an ease-of-use point of view because signature stamps require several keys and a digital certification for each signature (e-stamp) applied.

How can I eSign a form or contract in Word?

Signing documents electronically using airSlate SignNow is much easier than by hand or doing so in Word. Sign a contract or agreement regardless of its format, including Word. Upload a file to airSlate SignNow and open it with the built-in editor. Using the My Signature tool button, insert your eSignature. Choose how to generate your eSignature: type one, draw one, or upload one. Once you've saved the changes, your Word doc will come out as a court-admissible PDF.

How do you sign a PDF doc online?

There are many tools for signing PDF files online. Give airSlate SignNow a try, an up-to-date GDPR, HIPAA, CCPA, and SOC II compliant eSignature service. After you create an account, go to the Profile section to manage your signatures and initials. Click Add New Signature to create your own legally-binding signature by simply drawing, typing, or uploading an image. Every signature you create will be available for later use. Upload a PDF with the blue button at the very top of the page, select the My Signatures tool from the left-hand menu, and eSign your sample. Send forms for signing, integrate your account with the most popular business applications, and do all your paperwork online, in just a few clicks!
be ready to get more

Get legally-binding signatures now!