This library has been deprecated in favour of yet another form library. How did you find your way here anyway?!
A new react library created to make working with forms, like, totally delicious.
Motivation for yet another Form library
The goal of react-delicious-form
is to provide a flexible way to create forms in React and does not tie you to any state management library. It also does not provide any components out of the box (although it does provide small number of simple validation helper functions).
The API is simple and the props that it decorates your component with should be straight forward to use. The default export of react-delicious-form
is a single higher-order-component which should provide you with everything you'll need in order to make an awesome form. However, this library tries not to use any magic to accomplish this; input components will not magically appear - it is left up to you to build your own Input components. Form submission is not prevented by default, for example - you will have to decide under what circumstances it is okay to submit your form, display validation messages or otherwise show the user what state your form is currently in. This allows for:
- a natural way to build your forms
- the opportunity to move form logic out of your component and into a pure .js file (with no jsx)
- an easy and highly customizable form components, the implementation of which is left up to you.
This is a new library so if you bump into any bugs then please report them here. If you have any feature requests feel free to add them!
npm install --save react-delicious-form
// MyFormComponent.js
import withExampleForm from './exampleForm'
// The creation of an Input component is left up to you - for now.
// You'll find an example of how you might create an Input component that
// makes use of the props created by the withForm HOC
import { Input } from 'shared/components'
class MyFormComponent extends Component {
render() {
const { fields, form } = this.props
return (
<form onSubmit={form.onSubmit}>
<Input {...fields.firstName} />
<input type="submit" value="Save" />
</div>
)
}
}
// wrap your form component and export.
export default withExampleForm(MyFormComponent)
// withExampleForm.js
const withExampleForm = withForm({
fields: { // define your fields
firstName: {
props: { // available on your component via this.props.fields.firstName.props
label: 'First name',
placeholder: 'Enter your first name',
...
}
}
...
},
formHasFinishedLoadingWhen: (props) => !props.user.isFetching && props.refData.hasLoaded,
mapPropsToFields: (props) => ({ // called once formHasFinishedLoadingWhen returns true
firstName: props.user.firstName,
...
}),
formIsSubmittingWhen: (props) => props.user.submitting,
onSubmit: (formItem, props, context) => { // available on your component via this.props.form.submit
if (props.someResourceId)
props.updateSomeResource(props.someResourceId, formItem)
else
props.createSomeResource(formItem)
},
mapPropsToErrors: (props) => ({
firstName: props.errors.firstName, // must be an array of strings for each field
...
})
})
export default withExampleForm
- arguments:
- FormDefinition object
fields
formHasFinishedLoadingWhen
mapPropsToFields
onSubmit
formIsSubmittingWhen
mapPropsToErrors
- FormDefinition object
- returns a component decorated with form and fields props
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
fields |
object | The field definitions for this form. Used to specify props and validation for each field. Click here to see what each field definition is comprised of. |
formHasFinishedLoadingWhen(props) |
function | A function which accepts all incoming props and returns a boolean indicating whether the form has finished loading. mapPropsToFields will not be called untils formHasFinishedLoadingWhen function returns true . Specifies when all the data has finished loading for this form and hence when initial values can be mapped. The return value of formHasFinishedLoadingWhen affects form.status - while the form is loading form.status === 'loading' NB: The form will be disabled until this function returns true . |
mapPropsToFields(props) |
function | Maps incoming props to the fields definied by fields . Must return an object whose keys match the keys defined in fields . Unrecognized keys will not be mapped to any field. This function will only be called once formHasFinishedLoadingWhen returns true . |
onSubmit(formValue, props, context) |
function | Maps incoming props to the fields definied by fields . Must return an object whose keys match the keys defined in fields . Unrecognized keys will not be mapped to any field. This function will only be called once formHasFinishedLoadingWhen returns true . |
formIsSubmittingWhen(props) |
function | The field definitions for this form. Used to specify props and validation for each field. |
mapPropsToErrors(props) |
function | Maps incoming props to errors. This is intended to map server-side validation to the fields on the form. Must return an object whose keys match the keys defined in fields. Unrecognized keys will not be mapped to any field, however all values will be available in your component in this.props.form.errors which is useful for displaying errors that do not relate to any field in particular. The value of each key must be a simple string[] containing error messages for that field. |
For every FieldDefinition you can supply 3 optional properties.
props
- there are 2 possible ways provide these:
- As satic values
firstName: {
props: {
label: 'First name',
style: { color: '#000' }
}
}
// `fields.firstName.props` contains the keys `label` and `style`
- Using a function
// A function that accepts incoming props and returns an object which contains the props for this field.
// Useful if you need to compute these values based on some props being passed into your component
firstName: {
props: (props) => ({
label: props.getIntl('user.country.label'),
placeholder: props.getIntl('user.country.placeholder'),
className: props.currentModule.theme.input,
options: props.countries
})
}
// `fields.country.props` contains the keys `label`, `placeholder`, `className` and `options`
validators
- a list of validator functions that are used to determine whether the fieldisValid
or not. There are a small number of validator functions that come withreact-delicious-form
. If message is provided a default message is given.
import withform, { email, isRequired, minLength, maxLength } from 'react-delicious-form'
...
firstName: {
...
validators: [
isRequired(),
minLength(3, 'First name must be at least 3 characters')
]
}
...
- Similar to the way you can provide a function to compute props, the same can be done for validators:
firstName: {
...
validators: (props) => ([
isRequired(props.getIntl('firstName.validation.required')),
minLength(props.minNameLength, props.getIntl('firstName.validation.minLength', props.minNameLength))
])
}
- It is also possible to define your own validators. Each validator is a function which can accept up to 3 arguments in the following order
field
,allFields
,props
.
Each validator must return a ValidationResult object containing anisValid
value and amessage
(ifisValid === false
this is the message that will be presented)
// passwordValidators.js
const checkPasswordStrength = (field, allFields, props) => {
const isValid = SOME_COMPLEX_REG_EX.test(field.value)
return {
isValid,
message: isValid ? undefined : 'Your password isnt strong enough'
}
}
const checkPasswordsMatch = (field, allFields, props) => {
const isValid = field.value === allFields.password.value
return {
isValid,
message: isValid ? undefined : 'Passwords do not match'
}
}
// LoginForm.js
...
fields: {
password: {
props: {
label: 'Password',
type: 'password'
},
validators: [
isRequired('Password is required')
checkPasswordStrength
]
},
confirmPassword: {
props: {
label: 'Confirm password',
type: 'password'
},
validators: [
checkPasswordsMatch
]
}
}
initialValue
- an optional value to be used as the initial value for this field
- As with
props
andvalidators
this can either be a static value or a function that maps incoming props to this field.
Note this takes priority over any value supplied for this field inmapPropsToFields
. As withmapPropsToFields
, if initial value is a function it will only be used to setinitialValue
onceformHasFinishedLoadingWhen
returnstrue
countryOfBirth: {
props: {
label: 'Select $#*! hole country',
options: [
'South Africa',
'Zimbabwe',
'Nambia'
]
},
initialValue: (props) => props.user.countryOfBirth
// alternatively you can use a static value
// initialValue: 'South Africa'
},
...
formHasFinishedLoadingWhen
is an optional function which tells your form when it is ready to receive props and map them to the form fields.
If this function is supplied you will not be able update any form values until thisformHasFinishedLoadingWhen
returnstrue
. If this function is not supplied the form will be will be considered loaded by default.
...
formHasFinishedLoadingWhen: (props) => props.formType === 'create' || !props.fetching
...
mapPropsToFields
is a function that should return a plain object whose keys match those defined byFormDefinition.fields
. If this function is not supplied default values will be assigned to each field
...
mapPropsToFields: (props) => {
if(props.formType === 'edit') {
return props.user
}
// no need to return any values for the form is there are none
}
...
- onSubmit is a function that maps incoming props to a boolean values that tells the form when it in
'submitting'
state. This is useful to disable buttons on your form, or to show a loader of some kind to your users.
...
formIsSubmittingWhen: (props) => props.isSubmitting
...
- onSubmit is a function that accepts 3 arguments.
formValue
- the current value of the formprops
- all props passed to your component from its parentcontext
- a wild card value which can be passed to this function from your component. This is useful if you have some local state in your form that needs to be available when submitting your form.
See contrived example below:
...
onSubmit: (formValue, props, context) => {
if(context.isRegistration) {
props.createAccount(formValue)
} else {
props.login(formValue)
}
}
...
// this can then be called in your component like so:
class AuthForm extends Component {
state = { isRegistration: true }
...
submit = () => {
const { onSubmit } = this.props.form
onSubmit(this.state)
}
render() {
return (
<div className="login-form">
...
<input type="button" onClick={this.submit} />
</div>
)
}
}
Maps incoming props to errors. This is intended to map server-side validation to the fields on the form. Must return an object whose keys match the keys defined in fields. Unrecognized keys will not be mapped to any field, however all values will be available in your component in this.props.form.errors
which is useful for displaying errors that do not relate to any field in particular. The value of each key must be a simple string[]
containing error messages for that field. If any errors can be mapped they can be accessed via this.props.fields[someCoolFieldName].errors
.
Note that mapPropsToErrors
does not store these errors in any state, it simply maps them to your fields, therefore you are responsible for clearing our any error messages from whatever they are stored. Also note that these errors will be displayed regardless of whether the user has attempted submitting the form or not. Errors will be mapped as soon as they are found on props
.
...
mapPropsToErrors: (props) => ({
...props.serverErrors,
firstName: props.serverErrors.fName, // must be an array of strings for each field
})
...
// UserForm.js
import withForm, { isRequired, minLength } from 'react-delicious-form'
import { Input } from 'shared/components'
export default withForm({
fields: { // FieldDefinitions
firstName: {
props: {
label: 'First name',
style: { color: '#000' }
},
validators: [
isRequired('First name is required'),
minLength(3, 'First name must be at least 3 characters')
],
initialValue: ''
}
...
},
...
})(({ form, fields }) => (
<form onSubmit={form.onSubmit}>
// Flatten each field can be useful for when making use of PureComponent
<Input
{...fields.firstName.handlers}
{...fields.firstName.state}
{...fields.firstName.props}
/>
<input
type="submit"
value="Save User"
disabled={!form.validation.isValid || form.status === 'submitting'}
/>
</form>
))
These are the only two objects that the withForm
hoc adds to your component. Together they contain the functions and state that you'll need to work with forms.
These props can be accessed in your component as follows:
const { fields, form } = this.props // for class components
const { fields, form } = props // for stateless components
fields is a simple object, the keys of which correspond to the fields:
config object that you defined in the withForm
hoc.
The value of each field is defined below:
- The state property
This contains the state of a field which is made up of following values
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name |
string | The key - whatever you've named it. i.e.console.log(fields.firstName.state.name) // firstName |
value |
any | The current value of this field |
originalValue |
any | The initial value of this field. Equal to '' or whatever mapPropsToFields returned for this field |
touched |
boolean | true if the value of this field has changed at least once. Not the same as isDirty .A field will still be touched even if value is changed back to originalValue |
didBlur |
boolean | true if the input that controls this field has gained and lost focus at least once |
isDirty |
boolean | true whenever value !== originalvalue , otherwise false |
isValid |
boolean | true if all validation defined in validators passes, otherwise false |
messages |
string[] | An array of strings which contains all the validation messages for this field. messages will be empty if isValid === 'true' |
- The props property
This simply contains the props that you defined for the field in the FieldDefinition
wish to {...spread}
on to your input and is a convient way to define the props any given input field.
Be careful not to spread props onto an HTML input without checking that all the props passed to it belong on said element,
otherwise React is likely to give you a warning. It is recommended that you create
your own Input
components that know what to do with the props that are being passed to them. You can find an example of this further down on this page.
- The handlers property
This contains two important functions:
onChange(e)
onBlur(e)
These handlers are crucial and should should be given to your Input
component so that it knows how and when to update the fields state
.
Both onChange
and onBlur
must be passed the event parameter since state for every field is changed using event.currentTarget.name
.
If you wish to update the fields value manually you will have to use the updateField
or bulkUpdateFields
functions which are made available on the form
prop
The second prop that is made available to your component is the form object:
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
validation |
object | Contains the validation state of the entire form |
onSubmit |
function | The function used to to submit your form. It accepts a single optional parameter which is passed to onSubmit (3rd argument) on your FormDefinition config when defining your form. NB Do not get confused by onSubmit (a function which is a property of the FormDefinition object), and form.onSubmit(context) function which is ultimately made available to your component via the form prop. |
updateField |
function | A function used to update a single field. |
bulkUpdateFields |
function | A function used to update multiple fields simultaneously. |
status |
string | 'loading' , 'submitting' , 'touched' , 'clean' |
isDirty |
boolean | true if any one or more field's isDirty flag is also true |
value |
object | An object containing current value of the form |
errors |
string[] | A flattened list of errors based on the values of the object return by mapPropsToErrors |
submitCount |
number | A number indicating the number of times the onSubmit method has been called` |
hasSubmitted |
boolean | A value indicating whether the user has attempted to submit this form at least once. hasSubmitted will be true if submitCount > 0 , otherwise false |
// updates a single field
form.updateField('firstName', 'Munk')
// update multiple fields at the same time
form.bulkUpdateFields({
firstName: 'Munk',
lastName: 'Jones'
})
Below is an example of what an Input and a FormSubmit component might look like. You can use the state of a field to determine when and how to display validation messages. Use form state to alter what class is applied to a button, etc. Feel free to copy paste!
// Input.js
export default Input = ({
reff,
label = '',
name,
placeholder,
onChange = () => { },
isDirty,
value,
disabled = false,
className,
errors = [],
isValid = true,
messages,
touched = false,
didBlur = false,
onBlur = () => false,
showMessages = messages.length > 0 && didBlur && touched,
originalValue,
required,
...props
}) => (
<div className="form-group">
<label
htmlFor={name}
className="control-label"
>
{label}
</label>
<input
name={name}
className="form-control"
ref={reff}
disabled={disabled}
placeholder={placeholder}
onChange={onChange}
value={value}
aria-describedby={name}
onBlur={onBlur}
{...props}
/>
{showMessages && (
<span id={name} style={{ fontSize: 10, color: 'red' }}>
{messages[0]}
</span>
)}
</div>
)
// FormSubmit.js
const defaultButtonText = {
clean: 'Saved',
loading: 'Loading',
touched: 'Save',
submitting: 'Saving'
}
class FormSubmit extends PureComponent {
render() {
const {
onClick,
className,
disabled = false,
formStatus = 'touched',
buttonText = defaultButtonText,
...props } = this.props
return (
<button
onClick={onClick}
className={className}
disabled={disabled}
{...props}
>
{buttonText[formStatus]}
</button>
)
}
}
export default FormSubmit
// Form.js
import { Input, FormSubmit } from 'src/shared/components' // or what have you
class MyForm extends Component {
render() {
const { fields, form } = this.props
return (
...
<Input
{...fields.registrationNumber.handlers}
{...fields.registrationNumber.state}
{...fields.registrationNumber.props}
/>
<FormSubmit
onClick={form.submit}
formStatus={form.status}
/>
...
)
}
}
export withForm({
...
})(MyForm)