Discourse toolkit to render forms

Basic Usage

FormKit exposes a single component as its public API: <Form />. All other elements are yielded as contextual components, modifiers, or plain data.

Every form is composed of one or multiple fields, representing the value, validation, and metadata of a control. Each field encapsulates a control, which is the form element the user interacts with to enter data, such as an input or select. Other utilities, like submit or alert, are also provided.

Here is the most basic example of a form:

import Component from "@glimmer/component";
import { action } from "@ember/object";
import Form from "discourse/components/form";

export default class MyForm extends Component {
  @action
  handleSubmit(data) {
    // do something with data
  }

  <template>
    <Form @onSubmit={{this.handleSubmit}} as |form|>
      <form.Field
        @name="username"
        @title="Username"
        @validation="required"
        as |field|
      >
        <field.Input />
      </form.Field>

      <form.Field @name="age" @title="Age" as |field|>
        <field.Input @type="number" />
      </form.Field>

      <form.Submit />
    </Form>
  </template>
}

Form

Yielded Parameters

form

The Form component yields a form object containing components and helpers.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Row as |row|>
    <!-- ... -->
  </form.Row>
</Form>

transientData

transientData represents the state of the data at a given time as it’s represented in the form, and not yet propagated to @data.

:information_source: This is useful if you want to have conditionals in your form based on other fields.

Example

<Form as |form transientData|>
  <form.Field @name="amount" as |field|>
    <field.Input @type="number" />
  </form.Field>

  {{#if (gt transientData.amount 200)}}
    <form.Field @name="confirmed" as |field|>
      <field.Checkbox>I know what I'm doing</field.Checkbox>
    </form.Field>
  {{/if}}
</Form>

Properties

@data

Initial state of the data you give to the form.

The keys matching the @names of the form’s fields will be prepopulated.

:information_source: @data is treated as an immutable object, following Ember’s DDAU pattern. This means when the user enters new data for any of the fields, it will not cause a mutation of @data! You can mutate your initial object using @onSet.

When working with an object object we recommend to setup your form data object like this:

@cached
get formData() {
  return getProperties(this.model, "foo", "bar", "baz");
}

Parameter

  • data (Object): The data object passed to the template.

Example

<Form @data={{hash foo="bar"}} as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="foo" as |field|>
    <!-- This input will have "bar" as its initial value -->
    <field.Input />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

@onRegisterApi

Callback called when the form is inserted. It allows the developer to interact with the form through JavaScript.

Parameters

  • callback (Object): The object containing callback functions.
    • callback.submit (Function): Function to submit the form.
    • callback.reset (Function): Function to reset the form.
    • callback.set (Function): Function to set a key/value on the form data object.
    • callback.setProperties (Function): Function to set an object on the form data object.
    • callback.isDirty (boolean): Tracked property return the state of the form. It will be true once changes have been done on the form. Resetting the changes will bring it back to false.

Example

registerAPI({ submit, reset, set }) {
  // Interact with the form API
  submit();
  reset();
  set("foo", 1);
}
<Form @onRegisterApi={{this.registerAPI}} />

@onSubmit

Callback called when the form is submitted and valid.

Parameters

  • data (Object): The object containing the form data.

Example

handleSubmit({ username, age }) {
  console.log(username, age);
}
<Form @onSubmit={{this.handleSubmit}} as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="username" as |field|>
    <field.Input />
  </form.Field>
  <form.Field @name="age" as |field|>
    <field.Input @type="number" />
  </form.Field>
  <form.Submit />
</Form>

@validate

A custom validation callback added directly to the form.

Example

@action
myValidation(data, { addError }) {
  if (data.foo !== data.bar) {
    addError("foo", { title: "Foo", message: "Bar must be equal to Foo" });
  }
}
<Form @validate={{this.myValidation}} />

An asynchronous example:

@action
async myValidation(data, { addError }) {
  try {
    await ajax("/check-username", {
      type: "POST",
      data: { username: data.username }
    });
  } catch(e) {
    addError("username", { title: "Username", message: "Already taken!" });
  }
}

Field

@name

A field must have a unique name. This name is used to set the value on the data object and is also used for validation.

Example

<form.Field @name="foo" />

@title

A field must have a title. It will be displayed above the control and is also used in validation.

Example

<form.Field @title="Foo" />

@description

The description is optional and will be shown under the title when set.

Example

<form.Field @description="Bar" />

@helpText

The help text is optional and will be shown under the field when set.

Example

<form.Field @helpText="Baz" />

@showTitle

By default, the title will be shown on top of the control. You can choose not to render it by setting this property to false.

Example

<form.Field @showTitle={{false}} />

@disabled

A field can be disabled to prevent any changes to it.

Example

<form.Field @disabled={{true}} />

@tooltip

Allows to display a tooltip next to the field’s title. Won’t display if title is not shown.
You can pass a string or a <DTooltip /> component.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="foo" @title="Foo" @tooltip="a nice input" as |field|>
    <field.Input />
  </form.Field>
</Form>
<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field
    @name="foo"
    @title="Foo"
    @tooltip={{component DTooltip content="a nice input"}}
    as |field|
  >
    <field.Input />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

@validation

Read the dedicated validation section.

@validate

Read the dedicated custom validation section.

@onSet

By default, when changing the value of a field, this value will be set on the form’s internal data object. However, you can choose to have full control over this process for a field.

Example

@action
handleFooChange(value, { set }) {
  set("foo", value + "-bar");
}
<form.Field @name="foo" @onSet={{this.handleFooChange}} as |field|>
  <field.Input />
</form.Field>

:information_source: You can use @onSet to also mutate the initial data object if you need more reactivity for a specific case.

Example

@action
handleFooChange(value, { set }) {
  set("foo", value + "-bar");
  this.model.foo = value + "-bar";
}
<Form @data={{this.model}} as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="foo" @onSet={{this.handleFooChange}} as |field|>
    <field.Input />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Controls

Controls, as we use the term here, refer to the UI widgets that allow a user to enter data. In its most basic form, this would be an input.

:information_source: You can pass down HTML attributes to the underlying control.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field
    @name="query"
    @title="Query"
    @description="You should make sure the query doesn’t include bots."
    as |field|
  >
    <field.Input placeholder="Foo" />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

@format

Controls accept a @format property which can be: small, medium, large, or full.

Form Kit sets defaults for each control, but you can override them using @format:

  • small: 100px
  • medium: 220px
  • large: 400px
  • full: 100%

Additionally, the following CSS variables are provided to customize these defaults:

  • small: --form-kit-small-input
  • medium: --form-kit-medium-input
  • large: --form-kit-large-input

@titleFormat

Allows to override @format for the title. See @format for details.

@descriptionFormat

Allows to override @format for the description. See @format for details.

Checkbox

Renders an <input type="checkbox"> element.

:information_source: When to use a single checkbox
There are only 2 options: yes/no. It feels like agreeing to something. Checking the box doesn’t save; there is a submit button further down.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="approved" @title="Approved" as |field|>
    <field.Checkbox />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Code

Renders an <AceEditor /> component.

@height

Sets the height of the editor.

@lang

Sets the language of the editor.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="query" @title="Query" as |field|>
    <field.Code @lang="sql" @height={{400}} />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Calendar

Renders a datepicker and a time input. On mobile the datepicker will be replaced by a date input.

@includeTime

Displays the time input or not. Defaults to true.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="start" @title="Start" as |field|>
    <field.Calendar @includeTime={{false}} />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

@expandedDatePickerOnDesktop

Displays date picker expanded on desktop. Defaults to true.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="start" @title="Start" as |field|>
    <field.Calendar @expandedDatePickerOnDesktop={{false}} />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Composer

Renders a <DEditor /> component.

@height

Sets the height of the composer.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="message" @title="Message" as |field|>
    <field.Composer @height={{400}} />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

@preview

Controls the display the composer preview. Defaults to false.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="message" @title="Message" as |field|>
    <field.Composer @preview={{true}} />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Icon

Renders an <IconPicker /> component.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="icon" @title="Icon" as |field|>
    <field.Icon />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Image

Renders an <UppyImageUploader /> component.

Upload Handling

By default, the component will set an upload object. It’s common to only want the URL and the ID of the upload. To achieve this, you can use the @onSet property on the field:

@action
handleUpload(upload, { set }) {
  set("upload_id", upload.id);
  set("upload_url", getURL(upload.url));
}
<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field
    @name="upload"
    @title="Upload"
    @onSet={{this.handleUpload}}
    as |field|
  >
    <field.Image />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="upload" @title="Upload" as |field|>
    <field.Image />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Input

Renders an <input> element.

@type

Optional property which will default to text. Maps to <input> types.

Allowed Types

  • color
  • date
  • datetime-local
  • email
  • hidden
  • month
  • number
  • password
  • range
  • search
  • tel
  • text
  • time
  • url
  • week

Special Cases

  • file is supported only for images through image
  • checkbox

Examples

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="email" @title="Email" as |field|>
    <field.Input />
  </form.Field>

  <form.Field @name="age" @title="Age" @type="number" as |field|>
    <field.Input />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

@before

Renders text before the input

Examples

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="email" @title="Email" @before="mailto:" as |field|>
    <field.Input />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

@after

Renders text after the input

Examples

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="email" @title="Email" @after=".com" as |field|>
    <field.Input />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Menu

Renders a component.

@selection

The text to show on the trigger.

yielded parameters

Item

Renders a selectable row. Accepts @value, @icon and @action props.

  • @value: allows to assign a value to a row.
  • @icon: shows an icon at the start of the row.
  • @action: override the default action which would set the value of the field with the value of this row.

The content will be yielded.

Divider

Renders a separator.

Container

Renders a div which will have for content the yielded content.

Examples

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="email" @title="Email" as |field|>
    <field.Menu as |menu|>
      <menu.Item @value={{1}} @icon="pencil-alt">Edit</menu.Item>
      <menu.Divider />
      <menu.Container class="foo">
        Bar
      </menu.Container>
      <menu.Item @action={{this.doSomething}}>Something</menu.Item>
    </field.Menu>
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Password

Renders an <input /> of type password. This control also includes a button which will allow to toggle the visibility of the text. When toggle the type of the input will be switched to text.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="secret" @title="Secret" as |field|>
    <field.Password />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Question

Renders two inputs of type radio where the first one is a positive answer, the second one a negative answer.

@yesLabel

Allows to customize the positive label.

@noLabel

Allows to customize the negative label.

Examples

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="email" @title="Email" as |field|>
    <field.Question @yesLabel="Correct" @noLabel="Wrong" />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

RadioGroup

Renders a list of radio buttons sharing a common name.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="foo" @title="Foo" as |field|>
    <field.RadioGroup as |radioGroup|>
      <radioGroup.Radio @value="one">One</radioGroup.Radio>
      <radioGroup.Radio @value="two">Two</radioGroup.Radio>
      <radioGroup.Radio @value="three">Three</radioGroup.Radio>
    </field.RadioGroup>
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Radio yielded parameters

Title

Allows to render a title.

Examples

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="foo" @title="Foo" as |field|>
    <field.RadioGroup as |RadioGroup|>
      <RadioGroup.Radio @value="one" as |radio|>
        <radio.Title>One title</radio.Title>
      </RadioGroup.Radio>
    </field.RadioGroup>
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Description

Allows to render a description.

Examples

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="foo" @title="Foo" as |field|>
    <field.RadioGroup as |RadioGroup|>
      <RadioGroup.Radio @value="one" as |radio|>
        <radio.Description>One description</radio.Description>
      </RadioGroup.Radio>
    </field.RadioGroup>
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Select

Renders a <select> element.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="fruits" @title="Fruits" as |field|>
    <field.Select as |select|>
      <select.Option @value="1">Mango</select.Option>
      <select.Option @value="2">Apple</select.Option>
      <select.Option @value="3">Coconut</select.Option>
    </field.Select>
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Text

Renders a <textarea> element.

@height

Sets the height of the textarea.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="description" @title="Description" as |field|>
    <field.Textarea @height={{120}} />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Toggle

Renders a <DToggleSwitch /> component.

:information_source: There are only 2 states: enabled/disabled. It should feel like turning something on. Toggling takes effect immediately, there is no submit button.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field @name="allowed" @title="Allowed" as |field|>
    <field.Toggle />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Layout

Form Kit aims to provide good defaults, allowing you to mainly use fields and controls. However, if you need more control, we provide several helpers: Row and Col, Section, Fieldset, Container and Actions.

You can also use utilities like Submit, Reset,Alert and InputGroup.

Actions

Actions is a custom Container designed to wrap your buttons in the footer of your form.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Actions>
    <form.Submit />
  </form.Actions>
</Form>

Alert

Displays an alert in the form.

@icon

An optional icon to use in the alert.

Example

<form.Alert @icon="info-circle">
  Foo
</form.Alert>

@type

Specifies the type of alert. Allowed types: success, error, warning, or info.

Example

<form.Alert @type="warning">
  Foo
</form.Alert>

Checkbox Group

CheckboxGroup allows grouping checkboxes together.

Example

<form.CheckboxGroup @title="Preferences" as |group|>
  <group.Field @name="editable" @title="Editable" as |field|>
    <field.Checkbox />
  </group.Field>
  <group.Field @name="searchable" @title="Searchable" as |field|>
    <field.Checkbox />
  </group.Field>
</form.CheckboxGroup>

Container

Container allows you to render a block similar to a field without tying it to specific data. It is useful for custom controls.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Container @title="Important" @subtitle="This is important">
    <!-- Container content here -->
  </form.Container>
</Form>

Fieldset

Wraps content in a fieldset.

Example

<form.Fieldset @name="a-fieldset" class="my-fieldset">
  Foo
</form.Fieldset>

@title

Displays a title for the fieldset, will use the legend element.

Example

<form.Fieldset @title="A title">
  Foo
</form.Fieldset>

@description

Displays a description for the fieldset.

Example

<form.Fieldset @description="A description">
  Foo
</form.Fieldset>

@name

Sets the name of the fieldset. This is necessary if you want to use the fieldset test helpers.

Example

<form.Fieldset @name="a-name">
  Foo
</form.Fieldset>

Input Group

Input group allows to group multiple inputs together on one line.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.InputGroup as |inputGroup|>
    <inputGroup.Field @title="Foo" @name="foo" as |field|>
      <field.Input />
    </inputGroup.Field>
    <inputGroup.Field @title="Bar" @name="bar" as |field|>
      <field.Input />
    </inputGroup.Field>
  </form.InputGroup>
</Form>

Reset

The Reset component renders a <DButton /> which will reset the form when clicked. It accepts all the same parameters as a standard <DButton />. The label and default action are set by default.

Example

<form.Reset />

To customize the Reset button further, you can pass additional parameters as needed:

Example with Additional Parameters

<form.Reset @translatedLabel="Remove changes" />

Row and Col

Row and Col enable you to utilize a simple grid system (12 columns) within your form.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Row as |row|>
    <row.Col @size={{4}}>
      <form.Field @name="foo" @title="Foo" as |field|>
        <field.Input />
      </form.Field>
    </row.Col>
    <row.Col @size={{8}}>
      <form.Field @name="bar" @title="Bar" as |field|>
        <field.Input />
      </form.Field>
    </row.Col>
  </form.Row>
</Form>

Section

Section provides a simple way to create a section with or without a title.

Example

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Section @title="Settings">
    <!-- Section content here -->
  </form.Section>
</Form>

Submit

The Submit component renders a <DButton /> which will submit the form when clicked. It accepts all the same parameters as a standard <DButton />. The label, default action, and primary style are set by default.

Example

<form.Submit />

To customize the Submit button further, you can pass additional parameters as needed:

Example with Additional Parameters

<form.Submit @translatedLabel="Send" />

Object

The object component allows to handle an object in your form.

Example

<Form @data={{hash foo=(hash bar=1 baz=2)}} as |form|>
  <form.Object @name="foo" as |object data|>
    <object.Field @name="bar" @title="Bar" as |field|>
      <field.Input />
    </object.Field>
    <object.Field @name="baz" @title="Baz" as |field|>
      <field.Input />
    </object.Field>
  </form.Object>
</Form>

@name

An object must have a unique name. This name is used as a prefix for the underlying fields.

Example

<form.Object @name="foo" />

Nesting

An object can accept a nested Object or Collection.

Example

<Form @data={{hash foo=(hash bar=(hash baz=1 bol=2))}} as |form|>
  <form.Object @name="foo" as |parentObject|>
    <parentObject.Object @name="bar" as |childObject data|>
      <childObject.Field @name="baz" @title="Baz" as |field|>
        <field.Input />
      </childObject.Field>
    </parentObject.Object>
  </form.Object>
</Form>

<Form @data={{hash foo=(hash bar=(array 1 2))}} as |form|>
  <form.Object @name="foo" as |parentObject|>
    <parentObject.Collection @name="bar" as |collection index|>
      <collection.Field @title="Baz" as |field|>
        <field.Input />
      </collection.Field>
      <form.Button
        class={{concat "remove-" index}}
        @action={{fn collection.remove index}}
      >Remove</form.Button>
    </parentObject.Collection>
  </form.Object>
</Form>

Collection

The collection component allows to handle array of objects in your form.

Example

<Form @data={{hash foo=(array (hash bar=1) (hash bar=2))}} as |form|>
  <form.Collection @name="foo" as |collection index|>
    <collection.Field @name="bar" @title="Bar" as |field|>
      <field.Input placeholder={{concat "item-" index}} />
    </collection.Field>
  </form.Collection>
</Form>

@name

A collection must have a unique name. This name is used as a prefix for the underlying fields.

For example, if collection has the name “foo”, the 2nd field of the collection with the name “bar”, will actually have “foo.1.bar” as name.

Example

<form.Collection @name="foo" />

@tagName

A collection will by default render as a <div class="form-kit__collection>, you can alter this behavior by using a @tagName.

Example

<form.Collection @name="foo" @tagName="tr" />

Primitive array

If the shape of your data is an array of primitives, eg: [1, 2, 3], form-kit is able to handle it. You just have to omit the name on the field in this case, as the name will be auto generated for you with the index.

Example

<Form @data={{hash foo=(array 1 2)}} as |form|>
  <form.Collection @name="foo" as |collection|>
    <collection.Field @title="Baz" as |field|>
      <field.Input />
    </collection.Field>
  </form.Object>
</Form>

Nesting

A collection can accept a nested Object or Collection.

Example

<Form
  @data={{hash foo=(array (hash bar=(hash baz=1)) (hash bar=(hash baz=2)))}}
  as |form|
>
  <form.Collection @name="foo" as |collection|>
    <collection.Object @name="bar" as |object|>
      <object.Field @name="baz" @title="Baz" as |field|>
        <field.Input />
      </object.Field>
    </collection.Object>
  </form.Collection>
</Form>

<Form
  @data={{hash
    foo=(array (hash bar=(array (hash baz=1))) (hash bar=(array (hash baz=2))))
  }}
  as |form|
>
  <form.Collection @name="foo" as |parent parentIndex|>
    <parent.Collection @name="bar" as |child childIndex|>
      <child.Field @name="baz" @title="Baz" as |field|>
        <field.Input />
      </child.Field>
    </parent.Collection>
  </form.Collection>
</Form>

Add an item to the collection

The <Form /> component yielded object has a addItemToCollection function that you can call to add an item to a specific collection.

Example

<Form @data={{hash foo=(array (hash bar=1) (hash bar=2))}} as |form|>
  <form.Button @action={{fn form.addItemToCollection "foo" (hash bar=3)}}>
    Add
  </form.Button>

  <form.Collection @name="foo" as |collection index|>
    <collection.Field @name="bar" @title="Bar" as |field|>
      <field.Input placeholder={{concat "item-" index}} />
    </collection.Field>
  </form.Collection>
</Form>

Remove an item from the collection

The <Collection /> component yielded object has a remove function that you can call to remove an item from this collection, it takes the index as parameter

Example

<Form @data={{hash foo=(array (hash bar=1) (hash bar=2))}} as |form|>
  <form.Collection @name="foo" as |collection index|>
    <collection.Field @name="bar" @title="Bar" as |field|>
      <field.Input />
      <form.Button @action={{fn collection.remove index}}>
        Remove
      </form.Button>
    </collection.Field>
  </form.Collection>
</Form>

Validation

Field accepts a @validation property which allows you to describe the validation rules of the field.

List of Available Rules

Accepted

The value must be "yes", "on", true, 1, or "true". Useful for checkbox inputs — often where you need to validate if someone has accepted terms.

Example

<field.Checkbox @name="terms" @validation="accepted" />

Length

Checks that the input’s value is over a given length, or between two length values.

Example

<field.Input @name="username" @validation="length:5,16" />

Number

Checks if the input is a valid number as evaluated by isNaN().

:information_source: When applicable, prefer to use the number input: <field.Input @type="number" />.

Example

<field.Input @name="amount" @validation="number" />

Required

Checks if the input is empty.

Example

<field.Input @name="username" @validation="required" />

URL

Checks if the input value appears to be a properly formatted URL including the protocol. This does not check if the URL actually resolves.

Example

<field.Input @name="endpoint" @validation="url" />

integer

Checks if the input value is an integer.

Example

<field.Input @name="age" @validation="integer" />

dateAfterOrEqual

Checks if the calendar data is after or equal to the specified date. Format must be YYYY-MM-DD.

Example

<field.Calendar @name="start" @validation="dateAfterOrEqual:2022-02-01" />

dateBeforeOrEqual

Checks if the calendar data is before or equal to the specified date. Format must be YYYY-MM-DD.

Example

<field.Calendar @name="start" @validation="dateBeforeOrEqual:2022-02-01" />

Combining Rules

Rules can be combined using the pipe operator: |.

Example

<field.Input @name="username" @validation="required|length:5,16" />

Custom Validation

Field

Field accepts a @validate property which allows you to define a callback function to validate the field. Read more about addError in helpers section.

Parameters

  • name (string): The name of the form field being validated.
  • value (string): The value of the form field being validated.
  • data (Object): The data object containing additional information for validation.
  • handlers (Object): An object containing handler functions.
    • handlers.addError (Function): A function to add an error if validation fails.

Example

validateUsername(name, value, data, { addError }) {
  if (data.bar / 2 === value) {
    addError(name, { title: I18n.t(`foo.bar.${name}`), message: "That's not how maths work." });
  }
}
<form.Field @name="username" @validate={{this.validateUsername}} />

Form

Form accepts a @validate property which allows you to define a callback function to validate the form. This will be called for each field of the form.

Parameters

  • data (Object): The data object containing additional information for validation.
  • handlers (Object): An object containing handler functions.
    • handlers.addError (Function): A function to add an error if validation fails.

Example

validateForm(data, { addError }) {
  if (data.bar / 2 === data.baz) {
    addError(name, { title: I18n.t(`foo.bar.${name}`), message: "That's not how maths work." });
  }
}
<Form @validate={{this.validateForm}} />

Helpers

Helpers are yielded by some blocks, like Form, or provided as parameters to callbacks. They allow you to interact with the form state in a simple and clear way.

set

set allows you to assign a value to a specific field in the form’s data.

Parameters

  • name (string): The name of the field to which the value is to be set.
  • value (number): The value to be set.

Example

set("foo", 1);

Using the set helper yielded by the form:

<Form as |form|>
  <DButton @action={{fn form.set "foo" 1}} @translatedLabel="Set foo" />
</Form>

setProperties

setProperties allows you to assign an object to the form’s data.

Parameters

  • data (object): A POJO where each key is going to be set on the form using its value.

Example

setProperties({ foo: 1, bar: 2 });

Using the setProperties helper yielded by the form:

<Form as |form|>
  <DButton
    @action={{fn form.setProperties (hash foo=1 bar=2)}}
    @translatedLabel="Set foo and bar"
  />
</Form>

addError

addError allows you to add an error message to a specific field in the form.

Parameters

  • name (string): The name of the field that is invalid.
  • error (object): The error’s data
    • title (string): The title of the error, usually the translated name of the field
    • message (string): The error message

Example

addError("foo", { title: "Foo", message: "This should be another thing." });

Customize

Plugin Outlets

FormKit works seamlessly with <PluginOutlet />. You can use plugin outlets inside your form to extend its functionality:

<Form as |form|>
  <PluginOutlet @name="above-foo-form" @outletArgs={{hash form=form}} />
</Form>

Then, in your connector, you can use the outlet arguments to add custom fields:

<@outletArgs.form.Field @name="bar" as |field|>
  <field.Input />
</@outletArgs.form.Field>

Styling

All FormKit components propagate attributes, allowing you to set classes and data attributes, for example:

<Form class="my-form" as |form|>
  <form.Field class="my-field" as |field|>
    <field.Input class="my-control" />
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Custom Control

Creating a custom control is straightforward with the properties yielded by form and field:

<Form as |form|>
  <form.Field class="my-field" as |field|>
    <field.Custom>
      <MyCustomControl id={{field.id}} @onChange={{field.set}} />
    </field.Custom>
  </form.Field>
</Form>

Available Parameters on form

Name Description
set Allows you to set the value of any field by name: set("bar", 1)

Available Parameters on field

Name Description
id ID to be used on the control for accessibility
name Name of the field
value The value of the field

Custom Validation

Field

The Field component accepts a @validate property, allowing you to define a callback function for custom field validation. Read more about addError in the helpers section.

Parameters

  • name (string): The name of the form field being validated.
  • value (string): The value of the form field being validated.
  • data (Object): The data object containing additional information for validation.
  • handlers (Object): An object containing handler functions.
    • handlers.addError (Function): A function to add an error if validation fails.

Example

validateUsername(name, value, data, { addError }) {
  if (data.bar / 2 === value) {
    addError(name, { title: I18n.t(`foo.bar.${name}`), message: "That's not how maths work." });
  }
}
<form.Field @name="username" @validate={{this.validateUsername}} />

Form

The Form component accepts a @validate property, allowing you to define a callback function for custom form validation.

Parameters

  • data (Object): The data object containing additional information for validation.
  • handlers (Object): An object containing handler functions.
    • handlers.addError (Function): A function to add an error if validation fails.

Example

validateForm(data, { addError }) {
  if (data.bar / 2 === data.baz) {
    addError(name, { title: I18n.t(`foo.bar.${name}`), message: "That's not how maths work." });
  }
}
<Form @validate={{this.validateForm}} />

Javascript assertions

Form

The form element assertions are available at assert.form(...).*. By default it will select the first “form” element.

Parameters

  • target (string | HTMLElement): The form element or selector.

hasErrors()

Asserts that the form has errors.

Parameters

  • message (string): The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().hasErrors("the form shows errors");

Field

The field element assertions are available at assert.form(...).field(...).*.

Parameters

  • name (string): The name of the field.

Example

assert.form().field("foo");

hasValue()

Asserts that the value of the field matches the expected text.

Parameters

  • expected (anything): The expected value.
  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().field("foo").hasValue("bar", "user has set the value");

isDisabled()

Asserts that the field is disabled.

Parameters

  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().field("foo").isDisabled("the field is disabled");

isEnabled()

Asserts that the field is enabled.

Parameters

  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().field("foo").isEnabled("the field is enabled");

hasError()

Asserts that the field has a specific error.

Parameters

  • error (string): The error message on the field.
  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().field("foo").hasError("Required", "it is required");

hasNoErrors()

Asserts that the field has no error.

Parameters

  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().field("foo").hasNoErrors("it is valid");

exists()

Asserts that the field is present.

Parameters

  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().field("foo").exists("it has the food field");

doesNotExist()

Asserts that the field is not present.

Parameters

  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().field("foo").doesNotExist("it has no food field");

hasCharCounter()

Asserts that the field has a char counter.

Parameters

  • current (integer): The current length of the field.
  • max (integer): The max length of the field.
  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().field("foo").hasCharCounter(2, 5, "it has updated the counter");

Fieldset

The field element assertions are available at assert.form(...).fieldset(...).*.

Parameters

  • name (string): The name of the fieldset.

Example

assert.form().fieldset("foo");

hasTitle()

Asserts that the title of the fieldset matches the expected value.

Parameters

  • expected (anything): The expected value.
  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().fieldset("foo").hasTitle("bar", "it has the correct title");

hasDescription()

Asserts that the description of the fieldset matches the expected value.

Parameters

  • expected (anything): The expected value.
  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert
  .form()
  .fieldset("foo")
  .hasDescription("bar", "it has the correct description");

includesText()

Asserts that the fieldset has yielded the expected value.

Parameters

  • expected (anything): The expected value.
  • message (string) [optional]: The description of the test.

Example

assert.form().fieldset("foo").includesText("bar", "it has the correct text");

Javascript helpers

Form

The FormKit helper allows you to manipulate a form and its fields through a clear and expressive API.

Example

import formKit from "discourse/tests/helpers/form-kit";

test("fill in input", async function (assert) {
  await render(
    <template>
      <Form class="my-form" as |form data|>
        <form.Field @name="foo" as |field|>
          <field.Input />
        </form.Field>
      </Form>
    </template>
  );

  const myForm = formKit(".my-form");
});

submit()

Submits the associated form.

Example

formKit().submit();

reset()

Resets the associated form.

Example

formKit().reset();

Field

Parameters

  • name (string): The name of the field.

fillIn()

Can be used on <field.Input @type="text" />, <field.Code />, <field.Textarea />, and <field.Composer />.

Parameters

  • value (string | integer | undefined): The value to set on the input.

Example

await formKit().field("foo").fillIn("bar");

toggle()

Can be used on <field.Checkbox />, <field.Toggle /> or <field.Password />

Will toggle the state of the control. In the case of the password control it will actually toggle the visibility of the field.

Example

await formKit().field("foo").toggle();

accept()

Can be used on <field.Checkbox />.

Example

await formKit().field("foo").accept();

refuse()

Can be used on <field.Checkbox />.

Example

await formKit().field("foo").refuse();

select()

Can be used on <field.Select />, <field.Menu />, <field.Icon />, and <field.RadioGroup />.

Will select the given value.

Parameters

  • value (string | integer | undefined): The value to select.

Example

await formKit().field("foo").select("bar");

System specs page object

Form

The FormKit page object component is available to help you write system specs for your forms.

Parameters

  • target (string | Capybara::Node::Element): The selector or node of the form.

Example

form = PageObjects::Components::FormKit.new(".my-form")
form = PageObjects::Components::FormKit.new(find(".my-form"))

submit

Submits the form

Example

form.submit

reset

Reset the form

Example

form.reset

has_an_alert?

Returns if the field is enabled or not.

Example

form.has_an_alert?("message")
expect(form).to have_an_alert("message")

Field

The field helper allows you to interact with a specific field of a form.

Parameters

  • name (string): The name of the field.

Example

field = form.field("foo")

value

Returns the value of the field.

Example

field.value
expect(field).to have_value("bar")

checked?

Returns if the control of a checkbox is checked or not.

Example

field.checked?
expect(field).to be_checked

unchecked?

Returns if the control of a checkbox is unchecked or not.

Example

field.unchecked?
expect(field).to be_unchecked

disabled?

Returns if the field is disabled or not.

Example

field.disabled?
expect(field).to be_disabled

enabled?

Returns if the field is enabled or not.

Example

field.enabled?
expect(field).to be_enabled

toggle

Allows toggling a field. Only available for: checkbox.

Example

field.toggle

fill_in

Allows filling a field with a given value. Only available for: input, text, code, and composer.

Example

field.fill_in("bar")

select

Allows selecting a specified value in a field. Only available for: select, icon, menu, radio-group, and question.

Example

field.select("bar")

accept

Allows accepting a field. Only available for: question.

Example

field.accept

refuse

Allows refusing a field. Only available for: question.

Example

field.refuse

upload_image

Takes an image path on the filesystem and uploads it for the field. Only available for the Image control.

Example

field.upload_image(image_file_path)

This document is version controlled - suggest changes on github.

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Der obige Code funktioniert nicht. Dieser Code funktioniert:

  validateApiKeyValue(name, value, { data, addError }) {
    console.log(`validate ${name} with ${value}`, data);
  }

Ist die Dokumentation falsch oder ist der Code falsch?

EDIT: Ich habe entschieden, dass es so ist, Update 21-form-kit.md by pfaffman · Pull Request #62 · discourse/discourse-developer-docs · GitHub

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Ich denke, all das @-Zeug sollte in Backticks stehen. Es pingt derzeit Benutzer mit denselben Benutzernamen an.

Ich glaube, der Form-Import war falsch, also habe ich OP aktualisiert

von

import Form from "discourse/form";

zu

import Form from "discourse/components/form";

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Verstehe ich richtig, dass dies nun der empfohlene Weg ist, ein Formular zu erstellen, um beispielsweise Daten für ein neues Modell zu sammeln, das von einem Plugin hinzugefügt wurde? Oder ist das für etwas anderes gedacht?

Ein kurzer Blick in den Quellcode zeigt keine wenige Beispiele außerhalb von Tests, und alle – einschließlich derer, die ich in offiziellen Plugins sehe – befinden sich in /admin.

Dieses Plugin fügt ein eindeutig kein Forum-ähnliches Modell zu Discourse hinzu (Discourse ist mein einziges Werkzeug, daher wird alles, was ich im Web entwickle, wahrscheinlich ein Discourse-Plugin sein). Kann ich davon ausgehen, dass es sinnvoll ist, dieses Toolkit für alle meine Formulare zu verwenden?

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Ja, das ist die Absicht… wenn alle Formulare die gleichen Muster verwenden, sind sie für uns einfacher zu unterstützen und auch für zukünftige Updates.

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Das ergibt Sinn, und eines Tages werden Core und Official Plugins darauf umgestellt, sodass ich mehr Beispiele haben werde? :wink:

Und das hat bisher noch niemand gemacht, da der Code ohne diese wunderbare neue Vorlage funktioniert?

Danke für deine Geduld! Ich habe mindestens eine Stunde damit verbracht, dieses Plugin zu debuggen, weil es nicht aktiviert war, daher fühle ich mich im Moment ziemlich unsicher.

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Können Sie auch den Beispielcode bearbeiten, den Leute wie ich blind in ihre Editoren kopieren?

Ich habe versucht, ihn zu bearbeiten, erhielt aber eine Fehlermeldung, dass mehr als 10 Benutzer erwähnt wurden.

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Ich habe in den letzten Tagen Fortschritte gemacht, um dies zum Laufen zu bringen. Ich habe das Gefühl, dass ich die erste Person bin, die versucht, diese Anweisungen zu befolgen. Hier sind einige Dinge, die mich aufgehalten haben. Ich denke, ein vollständiges funktionierendes Beispiel, entweder als Gist oder vielleicht etwas im Kern, wäre eine große Hilfe. Aber jetzt funktioniert es!

Vielleicht sollte transientData nach unten verschoben werden, da es nicht immer benötigt wird, und eine Menge Zeug, das zu diesem Zeitpunkt noch nicht eingeführt wurde, wird immer benötigt, um ein funktionierendes Beispiel zu haben?

Ebenso verstehe ich nicht, wie formData() in diesem Beispiel verwendet wird. Außer der Deklaration wird es nie verwendet. Vielleicht hätten Sie es so aufgerufen: data = formData() Oder Sie hätten es als \u003cForm @data=this.formData ... übergeben?

Über Validierung zu sprechen, ergibt erst dann Sinn, wenn wir wissen, welche Felder das sind

Außer, dass es nicht funktioniert (wenn Sie möchten, dass es Daten verwendet?) ohne (soweit ich das beurteilen kann), wenn Sie nicht

Aber das können Sie nicht tun, ohne

import { cached, tracked } from "@glimmer/tracking";

Oder vielleicht müssen Sie das nicht tun, aber Sie müssen @data={{@somethign}} in das \u003cForm\u003e-Tag aufnehmen? (Das hat zumindest dazu geführt, dass die Daten im Formular angezeigt wurden.)

Nein. Textarea rendert ein Textfeld, wie im folgenden Beispiel gezeigt.

Ich kann den DEditor nicht dazu bringen, den Vorschaltbildschirm anzuzeigen. Ich bin ziemlich sicher, dass ich ihn gesehen habe, als ich versucht habe, einen DEditor als benutzerdefiniertes Feld zu erstellen.

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Ich verwende es in einem bevorstehenden TC; es sind jedoch nur die grundlegenden Dinge.

Ich stimme zu, dass die Dokumentation präziser sein könnte. Ich hatte auch Schwierigkeiten, hauptsächlich weil die Erklärungen und Beispiele manchmal verwirrend waren. Ich denke, es geht mehr um die Reihenfolge, in der die Dinge in der Ausgabe erklärt werden. Außerdem hat mich die Deklaration eines Arrays mit hash aus irgendeinem Grund anfangs verwirrt. :sweat_smile:

Das gesagt, es ist wirklich coole Sache, und eine normalisierte Möglichkeit, Formulare zu erstellen, ist ausgezeichnet!

Ich weiß nicht, ob es Ihnen hilft, aber hier ist, was ich im Wesentlichen getan habe (nur das Wesentliche behalten)

import Component from "@glimmer/component";
import { cached, tracked } from "@glimmer/tracking";

const FORM_FIELDS = ["title", "maxWidth", "autoFit", "duration"];

export default class OptionsMarkmap extends Component {
  @tracked data;

  constructor() {
    super(...arguments);

    // Setzt die Standardwerte
    this.data = {
      title: "",
      maxWidth: 0,
      autoFit: "true",
      duration: 400,
    };
  }

  @cached
  get formData() {
    return getProperties(this.data, ...FORM_FIELDS);
  }

  @action
  save(data) {
    // 
  }

  <template>
    <Form @data={{this.formData}} @onSubmit={{this.save}} as |form|>
      <form.Field
        @name="title"
        @title="Title"
        @format="large"
        as |field|
      >
        <form.Container>
          <field.Input />
        </form.Container>
      </form.Field>

      <form.Field
        @name="maxWidth"
        @title="Max Node Width"
        @type="number"
        as |field|
      >
        <form.Container>
          <field.Input />
        </form.Container>
      </form.Field>

      <form.Field
        @name="autoFit"
        @showTitle={{false}}
        @title="Auto Fit"
        as |field|
      >
        <form.Container>
          <field.Checkbox />
        </form.Container>
      </form.Field>

      <form.Actions>
        <form.Submit @label="Save" />
      </form.Actions>
    </Form>
  </template>
}

Über data, das sind Ihre Anfangswerte.
Die Verwendung von formData ermöglicht es Ihnen, das Objekt zu cachen (da data unveränderlich ist), und getProperties ist eine gute Möglichkeit, anzugeben, welche Felder Sie einschließen, glaube ich. formData ist das, was Sie in <Form @data=... bereitstellen.

get formData() {
  return getProperties(this.data, ...FORM_FIELDS);
}
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Ja. Das ergibt alles Sinn, aber meistens erst, wenn man es weiß!

Aber ich glaube, ich verstehe nicht, was gecacht wird, oder vielleicht wo oder warum?

Ah! Das ist nett.

Ja. Ich denke, das sieht nach einem viel besseren “minimalen funktionierenden Modell” aus!

Danke!

Und mehr über field.Composer

Ich kann immer noch nicht herausfinden, wie ich die Vorschau anzeigen lassen kann. Ich habe etwas CSS bekommen, um die Vorschau anzuzeigen, aber ich kann sie immer noch nicht die volle Breite einnehmen lassen.

Ich habe <field.Composer @height={{80}} /> und es sieht genauso aus wie <field.Composer @height={{800}} />, (vielleicht gibt es eine Standard-CSS, die das überschreibt?) – gefunden! --form-kit-large-input: 100%; (tatsächlich beeinflusst das die Breite, aber ich bin mir bei der Höhe immer noch nicht sicher)

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Es gibt voll funktionsfähige Beispiele im Kern FTR.

Es gab legitime Probleme damit. Ich habe sie alle in FIX: supports height/preview form-kit composer by jjaffeux · Pull Request #31121 · discourse/discourse · GitHub behoben und in document composer preview option by jjaffeux · Pull Request #37 · discourse/discourse-developer-docs · GitHub dokumentiert.

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Es gab nicht (viele?) als ich das letzte Mal nachgesehen habe. Entweder war ich schlecht in grep letztes Mal, oder in den letzten ein oder zwei Wochen wurden eine ganze Menge hinzugefügt. Es wäre großartig, wenn diese Dokumentation auf eines von ihnen verweisen würde, das ein gutes Beispiel ist.

Alter! Das ist großartig! Ich kann es kaum erwarten, es auszuprobieren. Ich habe gestern (was sich wie) den ganzen Tag damit verbracht (zumindest 2 Stunden, obwohl). Ich bin so schlecht in CSS, dass ich dachte, ich wäre einfach dumm. Ah, du hast die versteckten und Höhen-Teile behoben. Es ist die Breite, mit der ich jetzt kämpfe. Ich bekomme den Composer nicht dazu, den halben Bildschirm einzunehmen, und stattdessen nimmt er mehr Platz ein, wenn Text eingegeben wird, und wenn das Feld leer ist, ist es so klein, dass nirgends Text eingegeben werden kann. Ich werde es später ansehen, aber ich bin so aufgeregt, dass ich so schnell wie möglich antworten wollte.

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@format="full" auf dem Feld, das den Komponisten umschließt

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Versuchen Sie diese Suche – sie enthält mindestens 10 „echte“ Beispiele und auch eine Reihe von Beispielen in Tests.

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Ja, und ehrlich gesagt bin ich zurückhaltend, auf Beispiele aus der Dokumentation zu verlinken, da diese Links dazu neigen, schlecht zu altern, da die Leute nicht wissen, dass die Dokumentation darauf verlinkt, wenn sie die Datei entfernen, den Pfad ändern, …

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Das hast du tatsächlich! Es funktioniert wirklich!

Vielen Dank.

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Was ist der richtige Weg, eine „Mehrfachauswahl“ zu implementieren? Ich meine, ich kann dem Benutzer die Möglichkeit geben, ein Array aus einer konstanten Menge von Enums zu aktualisieren.

Ich schätze, ich könnte eine Checkbox-Gruppe verwenden.

Aber gibt es eine „Dropdown“-Variante?

Zum Beispiel, wenn ich einige Zutaten habe:

[“Reis”, “Mango”, “Ei”, “Salz”, “Kreuzkümmel”]

Und ich möchte, dass der Benutzer keine, eine, mehrere oder alle auswählen kann.

Und das Ergebnis sollte in einem einzigen Array gespeichert werden.

Ich meine, ein Schalter für jedes Mitglied der vollständigen Menge.

Gibt es dafür ein bestehendes Beispiel?

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Vielleicht ein benutzerdefiniertes Feld zusammen mit MultiSelect verwenden? https://meta.discourse.org/t/discourse-toolkit-to-render-forms/326439#p-1603904-custom-control-110

Ich sehe einige Beispiele im Kern, zum Beispiel:

<form.Field
    @name="appliesTo"
    @title={{i18n "admin.config_areas.flags.form.applies_to"}}
    @validation="required"
    @validate={{this.validateAppliesTo}}
    @format="large"
    as |field|
  >
    <field.Custom>
      <MultiSelect
        @id={{field.id}}
        @value={{field.value}}
        @onChange={{field.set}}
        @content={{this.appliesToValues}}
        @options={{hash allowAny=false}}
        class="admin-flag-form__applies-to"
      />
    </field.Custom>
  </form.Field>

Würde das für Sie funktionieren?

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