basic-react-form
Install
npm install basic-react-form --save
Use
{ if value && ! return 'Invalid phone number' } // Can be `async/await`. // Can return a `Promise`. { console return } { const user = thisprops return <Form onSubmit= thissubmit > <Field required name="phone" component= TextInput type="tel" placeholder="Enter phone number" // Initial value for this field. value= userphone validate= thisvalidatePhone /> <Submit component= SubmitButton > Save </Submit> </Form> } // `error` is passed if the field is invalid. { return <div> <input type="text" ...rest /> error && <div className="error"> error </div> </div> } // `wait` is `true` while form is submitting. { return <button type="submit" disabled= wait || false > children </button> }
API
Form
The <Form/>
takes the following required properties:
onSubmit : Function(values)
— Can beasync
or return aPromise
.
The <Form/>
takes the following optional properties:
-
trim : Boolean
– Set tofalse
to disable trimming strings. Defaults totrue
. -
requiredMessage : String
– The defaulterror
message for<Field required/>
. Is"Required"
by default. -
onError : Function(Error)
— Submit error handler. E.g. can show a popup with error message. -
autoFocus : Boolean
— Set totrue
to automatically focus on the first form field when the form is mounted. Defauls tofalse
. -
onBeforeSubmit : Function
-
onAfterSubmit : Function
-
onAbandon : Function(fieldName, fieldValue)
— If a form field was focused but then the form wasn't submitted and was unmounted then this function is called meaning that the user possibly tried to fill out the form but then decided to move on for some reason (e.g. didn't know what to enter in a particular form field).
The <Form/>
component instance (ref
) provides the following methods:
-
focus(fieldName : String)
— focuses on a field. -
scroll(fieldName : String)
— scrolls to a field (if it's not visible on the screen). -
clear(fieldName : String)
— clears field value. -
get(fieldName : String)
— gets form field value. -
set(fieldName : String, value : String)
— sets form field value. -
values()
— returns form field values (an alternative toget(fieldName : String)
). -
reset()
— resets the form.
Upon form submission, if any one of its fields is invalid, then that field will be automatically scrolled to and focused, and the actual form submission won't happen.
Field
<Field/>
takes the following required properties:
-
name : String
-
component : (React.Component|Function|String)
— React component (can also be a string likeinput
).
<Field/>
takes the following optional properties:
-
value
- the initial value of the field. -
validate(value, allFormValues) : String
— form field value validation function returning an error message if the field value is invalid. -
error : String
- an error message which can be set outside of thevalidate()
function. Can be used for some hypothetical advanced use cases. -
required : String or Boolean
— adds "this field is required" validation for the<Field/>
with theerror
message equal torequired
property value if it's aString
defaulting to"Required"
otherwise. Note thatvalue={false}
is valid in case ofrequired
becausefalse
is a non-empty value (e.g. "Yes"/"No" dropdown), therefore usevalidate
function instead ofrequired
for checkboxes that are required to be checked, otherwise an unchecked checkbox will havevalue={false}
and will pass therequired
check.
<Field/>
passes the following properties to the field component
:
-
value
-
onChange
-
onFocus
-
onBlur
-
disabled : Boolean
— istrue
when form is submitting. -
required : Boolean
— istrue
when the<Field/>
isrequired
and the value is missing. -
error : String
— error message. -
All other properties are passed through.
The error
display algorythm is as follows:
-
Initially
error
for a field is not passed. -
Whenever the user submits the form,
error
s are displayed for all invalid form fields. -
Whenever the user edits a field's value,
error
becomesundefined
for that field while the user is focused on the field. -
Whenever the user focuses out of a field it is re-validated and
error
is passed if it's invalid. -
Whenever a new
error
property is manually set on the<Field/>
component thaterror
is displayed.
Therefore, the error
message is only shown when the user is not editing the field. For example, while the user is typing a phone number that phone number is invalid until the used inputs it fully, but it wouldn't make sense to show the "Invalid phone number" error to the user while he is in the process of inputting the phone number (it would just be an annoying distraction).
Submit
<Submit/>
takes the following required properties:
component : (React.Component|Function|String)
— React component (can also be a string likebutton
).
<Submit/>
passes the following properties to the component
:
-
wait : Boolean
— indicates if the form is currently being submitted. -
All other properties are passed through.
{ return <Form onSubmit= ... > <Field name="text" component= Input /> <Submit component= SubmitButton > Submit </Submit> </Form> } { return <button type="submit" disabled= wait > wait && <Spinner/> children </button> }
Field errors
An error
property can be set on a <Field/>
if this field was the reason form submission failed on the server side.
This must not be a simple client-side validation error because for validation errors there already is validate
property. Everything that can be validated up-front (i.e. before sending form data to the server) should be validated inside validate
function. All other validity checks which can not be performed without submitting form data to the server are performed on the server side and if an error occurs then this error goes to the error
property of the relevant <Field/>
.
For example, consider a login form. Username and password <Field/>
s both have validate
properties set to the corresponding basic validation functions (e.g. checking that the values aren't empty). That's as much as can be validated before sending form data to the server. When the form data is sent to the server, server-side validation takes place: the server checks if the username exists and that the password matches. If the username doesn't exist then an error is returned from the HTTP POST request and the error
property of the username <Field/>
should be set to "User not found"
error message. Otherwise, if the username does exist, but, say, the password doesn't match, then the error
property of the password <Field/>
should be set to "Wrong password"
error message.
One thing to note about <Field/>
error
s is that they must be reset before form data is sent to the server: otherwise it would always say "Wrong password"
even if the password is correct this time. Another case is when the error
is set to the same value again (e.g. the entered password is wrong once again) which will not trigger showing that error because the error
is shown only when its value changes: nextProps.error !== this.props.error
. This is easily solved too by simply resetting error
s before form data is sent to the server.
@ { if !value return 'Required' } { // Clears `state.loginForm.error` // Sends form data to the server return } { const loginError = thisprops return <Form onSubmit=thissubmit> <Field name="username" component=Input validate=thisvalidateNotEmpty error=loginError === 'User not found' ? loginError : undefined /> <Field name="password" component=Input validate=thisvalidateNotEmpty error=loginError === 'Wrong password' ? loginError : undefined /> <Submit component=SubmitButton> Log In </Submit> </Form> } { return <div> <input ...rest/> error && <div className="error"> error </div> </div> }