Send Different Conditional with airSlate SignNow

Get rid of paper and automate digital document managing for higher efficiency and countless possibilities. eSign anything from your home, fast and professional. Explore a greater manner 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

Get the powerful eSignature capabilities you need from the solution you trust

Select the pro service designed for pros

Whether you’re introducing eSignature to one team or across your entire company, this process will be smooth sailing. Get up and running swiftly with airSlate SignNow.

Set up eSignature API with ease

airSlate SignNow is compatible the applications, services, and gadgets you currently use. Easily integrate it right into your existing systems and you’ll be effective instantly.

Collaborate better together

Enhance the efficiency and productivity of your eSignature workflows by giving your teammates the capability to share documents and templates. Create and manage teams in airSlate SignNow.

Send different conditional, within a few minutes

Go beyond eSignatures and send different conditional. Use airSlate SignNow to sign agreements, gather signatures and payments, and speed up your document workflow.

Decrease the closing time

Eliminate paper with airSlate SignNow and minimize your document turnaround time to minutes. Reuse smart, fillable templates and deliver them for signing in just a couple of minutes.

Maintain important information safe

Manage legally-binding eSignatures with airSlate SignNow. Run your organization from any place in the world on virtually any device while maintaining high-level security and compliance.

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 send different 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 send different conditional later when your internet connection is restored.
Integrate eSignatures into your business apps
Incorporate airSlate SignNow into your business applications to quickly send different 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 send different 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 — send different 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. send different 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 send different 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 send different 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 enviroment, is what enterprises need to keep workflows functioning efficiently. The airSlate SignNow REST API enables you to integrate eSignatures into your app, website, CRM or cloud storage. Check out airSlate SignNow and get quicker, easier and overall more efficient eSignature workflows!

How it works

Open & edit your documents online
Create legally-binding eSignatures
Store and share documents securely

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!

What active users are saying — send different 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.

Wonderful and convenient
5
Mandy Bullock

What do you like best?

How easy it is to work for me and my clients

Read full review
Link Feature is Perfect
5
User in Mining & Metals

What do you like best?

There are many digital signature softwares out there, but I like airSlate SignNow because they allow you to send a link to contracts. Most other platforms make you send the contract to email addresses that you put in the system. This is a great feature and makes life so much easier.

Read full review
Easy way to get signatures.
5
Claudia Ramirez

What do you like best?

Easy to use for our employees and clients love it!

Read full review

Related searches to send different conditional with airSlate airSlate SignNow

conditional email notifications google forms free
google forms send email based on response script
send google form responses to multiple email addresses
google form conditional email notification script
a copy of your responses will be emailed to
email notifications for forms
google forms push notifications
google forms send email to responder
video background

Send different conditional

Hi again. Welcome to www.engvid.com. I'm Adam. Today's lesson is a little bit tricky. It's grammar, it's conditionals, but we're going to look at "Mixed Conditionals". Now, before I get into the different types of ways that you can mix tenses and the conditionals, I want to do a very quick review of the conditionals that most of you learn in your ESL classes or your English... Other English classes, because these are the ones that are most commonly taught, and everybody, all your teachers want you to memorize these structures. The problem is then you might see mixed conditionals in other places, and you get all confused. Okay? I'm not going to get too deep into these, because you can find other good lessons by other engVid teachers who have already covered some of these on the site. I'm just going to do a quick review, and then I'll get into... Deeper into the mixed conditionals. So here are the four main types of conditionals you learn: "If I won the lottery, I'd buy a house." So this, just so we are clear, is "would", I've contracted it to "I'd". "If I won", I have simple past tense, plus "would" in the second clause, in the condition clause, in the result clause. "If I had known she was coming, I'd have come too." Okay? Here I have the past perfect, plus "would have" plus PP, past participle verb. Now, these are both unreal, mean... Meaning that they are hypothetical, they are imaginary. This is about a future or present unreal situation. I didn't win the lottery, I'm not buying a house; this is all just imagination. This is about the past. Now, the reason it is unreal is because I can't go and change the past. So, this didn't happen, and so this didn't happen. This is, again, imagination, but we're looking at the past. Okay? "If you boil water, it evaporates." If you notice here, I have simple present verb and simple present verb. This is a real conditional. It means it's true. Whenever you have a fact-okay?-a result is based on this condition and it's always true... By the way, "evaporates" means becomes steam, it goes away. Right? If you boil water, eventually you have no more water in the pot. So this is a real conditional, always true. Simple present, simple present. Lastly: "If you study hard, you will pass the test." Simple present verb, "will", verb, like future. So, again, this is a real situation, because this is true. If you do this, this will happen as a result. So these are the ones that you mostly learn. If you have any questions, again, go to www.engvid.com, find the lessons about these that can explain it in more detail. But now we're going to see other situations, other sentences with "if" conditionals that are not like these. Sometimes we can mix tenses, sometimes you can... Sorry. Let me stop myself, here. Sometimes your teachers tell you: "Never put 'will' with the 'if' clause." Well, what I'm going to show you is that sometimes, yeah, you can. This is the problem with English: There's always exceptions to the rules. Today we're going to look at some of those exceptions. Okay? Let's see what happens. Okay. So now we're going to look at a few different types of mixtures, if you want to call it that, with the "if" clauses. But before I start to show you these examples, I want you to understand that these mixed conditionals are all about context. You can generally understand what is going on, what the relationship between the two verbs are by looking at the context, looking at the time, looking at the place, looking at the situation that's going on, and should... It usually should be very clear, but in case you're wondering how to construct these so you can use them yourselves, I'll show you with a few examples. Okay? These are in no particular order. They're just examples, and we're going to look at them individually. "If you didn't study computers in high school, you might find this course difficult." So now you're thinking: "Okay, here I have a simple past. Okay? And here I have a future. Well, that's a little bit confusing. Oh, how can you mix past and future?" But what you have to realize is that this is a past situation that if you didn't complete something, if you didn't study computers, when you... You're starting a new course today, and this course is going to be very difficult for you because you don't have the previous knowledge. So, a past situation has a present result. Okay? So one of the things you also need to think about mixed conditionals: A lot of it is a relationship between condition and result, as opposed to a condition and something happening depending on that condition. Okay? So this doesn't depend on this; this is a result of this. I'm not sure if that's exactly clear. When you say: "If you study hard, you will pass the test." You will pass the test... Your passing depends on what you did before. This doesn't depend on this. You can still do well, you can still find the course easy if you didn't study hard, but there's a possibility that this situation will have this result. Okay? So, simple past with future. And I use "might", "might" generally talks about the future. I could use "will" as well with this. So this is one example of a mixed conditional. And again, in context, you understand that the person is starting this course now without the background information, so it should be pretty clear. Let's look at the next example. "If you didn't want to buy that shirt, you shouldn't have (bought it)." Like, normally, we would end the sentence here, but just so you understand the complete idea. "If you didn't want to", past. When we're talking about a specific situation, we're talking about the time that you bought this shirt, so it's a simple past because it's a definite past time. And "shouldn't have", again, "you should not have bought it", it's a present perfect about an indefinite time, which is a little bit of a weird mix because in... That's you talking about your experience. When we're using the present perfect, we're talking about the experience, here, we're talking about a specific action happening in the past. Why did you buy it? Maybe somebody talked you into it. Okay? You didn't really want to, but you did. But you shouldn't have bought it. Okay? That should have been the experience that you had, but it wasn't. So, again, it's not necessarily a condition, here, it's just the relationship between two ideas. One doesn't depend on the other. Okay. Simple past, again, and "should not have", and again, in present perfect. Okay. Let's go to the other one. "If you go, I'll go too." Now you're thinking: "Well, no, it's not a mixed. Right?" Because I have a simple present, and I have the "will", future. But what you have to understand is that here, this is being used as a future. Okay? We're using the simple present tense to talk about the future. "If you go to the party next week, I will go too." Okay? So, future, future. Okay? Now, another thing: real, real, real. None of these are imaginary. Okay? All of this is actual real situations; we're not imagining anything. So, future with simple present and future with "will". Next: "If I had won the competition, I'd have a great job now." So here we have, again, the present... Sorry, we have the past perfect. Okay? And now, it should be: "I would have", plus another verb, a past participle, a PP verb, right? But here I have only "would have". "I would have", this is the main verb. This is not the "would have done", not the "have" of the whole mix. Right? This is its own verb. If you want, I'll give you another one: "I'd land a great job now". "Land" means get. It's another way to say... When you get a job, you land a good job. So why am I using the two mixes, here? "If I had won the competition", so there was a competition in the past, I'm going to that situation. If I had won it... This is a past unreal, because I didn't win it, then now I would have this job. But because this didn't happen, this is no longer a real situation. Okay? I didn't win the competition, so now I don't have a great job now. Okay? So you've got past, and you have hypothetical, and you have present time. So all these things are mixed, but again, it's all about context. What you have to understand: "If I had won, but I didn't, I would have, but I don't." Okay? So this is the whole idea of mixing conditionals and getting the idea across, without having a very set expression. It's all about the big idea, the relationship between the two. Okay? We're going to look at a few more examples. Okay, now we have a few more. Some of these are very exceptional, means you're not going to hear them too often; they're specific situations. The first one, as an example. "If you will please follow me, I'll show you to your table." Or: "If you would, please follow... If you would, follow me please, I'll show you to your table." This is not a conditional. This is just an expression, a very formal expression. You go to a restaurant, a very fancy restaurant. The host checks your name on the reservations. "Very good. If you will please follow me, I'll show you to your table." It's just a polite way to say: "Please follow me." Okay? And I'm using "if" plus "will", or "if" plus "would", and "will" in the second one. Okay? It's not a conditional. It means: "Please come this way." Okay. It's a very specific situation. You're not going to use this too often. "If it will help my case, I'll take the test." Now, here, I have: "If" and "will", and then "will" again. Now, you've always been told: "No, don't do that." Right? Don't put "will" with the "if" clause, but again, this is not a conditional. This is the result, this is what I will do to get this result. Okay? This does not depend on this. For example: The police... Sorry. The police arrested me, and they said: "We think you killed Mr. X and Mr. Y." I say: "No, I didn't do it." And they said: "Well, I think... We think you're lying." And my lawyer says: "Take the polygraph test." You know, like the test they put on you, and if you're lying, the machine goes up and down like crazy. So I say: "Okay, you know what? If it will help my case, I will take the test." If I can get this result, I will do this action. Okay? So the relationship is not of... One of condition and not of dependency. Result and action. Okay? But: "If it helps, I'll take the test." Here, we have the regular conditional. If it helps, this is what I will do. So if I want, for this condition, I'll do this action. Okay? Now: "If I knew how to cook, I'd have made you dinner instead." So last week, I took a girl out on a date, we went to a restaurant, the food was terrible. She thought, you know, maybe I'm not such a good guy, she doesn't want to date me again. And I say: "No, no, no. I'm a very good guy. I took you to a restaurant because I don't know how to cook. If I knew how to cook,"-unreal, imaginary-"I would have taken you to dinner last week instead." Right? So, past. "I would have made", so past situation, "would have made", but with an unreal condition, with an unreal situation now. "If I knew how to cook". I don't know how to cook, but I still want to tell you what I would have done in the past. Okay? So it's a little bit of a mixed, simple past with "would have made". Last one: "If I weren't so busy, I would go with you." If I weren't so busy, but I am very busy now, I would go with you. So because this is the situation: "If I weren't so busy," -it's real, I am busy-"I would go with you." Now it's a hypothetical. Now it's unreal because I can't go with you. Why? Because I'm so busy. "If my parents weren't going away next weekend, I would have invited you yesterday." Okay? So now, again, we're mixing. I'm still using the past, but I'm talking about the future, and I'm talking about what I would have done yesterday if this weren't true about next weekend. Okay? So, again, all you need to realize is that the verbs don't necessarily tell you what's going on in terms of time, especially when you have adverb clauses. It's not only with this. It sometimes happens with other adverb clauses, but especially with "if" it's confusing, again, because you're mostly being taught those first four that I showed you the... At the beginning. Okay? You can mix them. This is a past verb, talking about the future. Okay? The situation right now is that my parents are going away. But yesterday when I spoke to you, I didn't invite you because I know they're going. But if they weren't going, I would have invited you yesterday. Okay? I know it's a little bit confusing, but you may want to watch the video a couple more times. Please ask me questions in the forum at www.engvid.com; I will be happy to answer all your questions. There is a quiz, go try it out, see how you do with that. Of course, subscribe to my YouTube channel, and... If you like. And come back again and we'll do this again. Thanks.

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

How can I sign my name on a PDF?

In a nutshell, any symbol in a document can be considered an eSignature if it complies with state and federal requirements. The law differs from country to country, but the main thing is that your eSignature should be associated with you and indicates that you agree to do business electronically. airSlate SignNow allows you to apply a legally-binding signature, even if it’s just your name typed out. To sign a PDF with your name, you need to log in and upload a file. Then, using the My Signature tool, type your name. Download or save your new document.

How can I virtually sign a PDF file?

Signing documents online is very convenient and efficient. Try airSlate SignNow, a respected professional eSignature solution. You need to create an account to use it if you plan on sending signature requests. Log in and upload your PDF. However, if you are signing a document sent to you by someone with airSlate SignNow, you don’t need an account. From inside a document that you have already opened in the editor, choose My Signature from the left-side menu and drop it where you need to sign. In the pop-up window, click Add New Signature and select which way you’d like to eSign the document. You can upload an image of your handwritten signature, draw it, or just type in your name.

How do you sign a PDF with your mouse?

You can get your PDFs signed with your mouse in a couple of clicks. Log in to your airSlate SignNow account, upload a document, open it in the editor, and select the My Signature tool. From three available options, choose Draw Your Signature. Then, left-click, draw your autograph, and click Sign. Then, adjust its placement and size. Select OK to apply the changes and export the document.
be ready to get more

Get legally-binding signatures now!