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Question

Creating a form that provides custom responses without branching individual questions

  • August 11, 2025
  • 3 replies
  • 44 views

Hello,

I’m looking to create a form that provides tailored results based on the respondent’s answers. I want the respondents to answer every single question, with the multiple choice response options for every one being “Yes, No, N/A, or Cannot be Determined”. If they answer “Yes” to any question, I want that to trigger one or several of the 4 possible results A, B, C, D (some “Yes” responses will only trigger A, others might trigger A&D, or B, C, &D). I don’t want them to see these results until they get to the end of the form.

Is it possible to do this with Typeform? In exploring the platform I’ve only been able to see examples where the logic is used to branch between questions, but not to trigger particular results that are then shared at the end. I don’t think the Outcome or Score Quiz formats quite work for this either.

Any help would be appreciated - thanks!

3 replies

Laura Marco
Typeform
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  • Typeform
  • August 13, 2025

Hello! This is Laura from Typeform’s support team. 

I believe that what you are trying to achieve would be possible either:

  • Using the Outcomes quiz here: Your case resembles a personality quiz, where certain endings can combine data from different types of results.
  • Alternatively, you could use the Branching feature, which would involve manually creating various logic rule combinations.

To provide you with the best solution, could you share more details about what your endings would look like and the information you plan to include? Specifically:

  • How many questions will your form have
  • And how many ending combinations are you considering? Example: A&D, or B, C, &D...

Please feel free to respond here or reach out via our contact support form.

 

Additionally, keep in mind that you can create an ending that can recall different information for each respondent. This option can help simplify the number of different endings your form may have.

 

I hope this helped and we’ll wait for your response! 


  • Author
  • Explorer
  • August 13, 2025

Hi Laura,

Thanks very much for your response. The form would have about 15-20 questions, and theoretically, there would be up to 15 different ending combinations of the A, B, C & D. If a “Yes” answer to Question 1 triggers A, and a “Yes” answer to Question 5 triggers A and C, with the rest of the questions being “No” and not triggering anything, then I would like the results to show A & C. 

 


john.desborough
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  • Certified Partner & Champion
  • August 14, 2025

@lorina.h - your logic rules would have to be put in place at the end of the questions at the point where you are determining which ending to drive the user .. if the last question was q20, then your rules would something like this: 

  • if q1 = Yes and q5 = Yes then go to Ending A+C (a single ending page for this combo of results
  • if q1 = Yes then go to Ending A 

 

the reason you put them in this order is that typeform reads the rules top down, so put the most restrictive  at the top

 

you would need to create endings for all the combos and then put the appropriate rules in place. 

des