- boilerplate-free field label and error rendering
- validation tests and error messages as data and functions with support for validations conditioned upon form data
- library of common form fields with support for supplying your own field components
- use default store (component state) or supply your own functions describing how to write field values (you're responsible for supplying a
values
prop) - model first architecture-ready; bundle validations and data transformations into a single prop
- observable
- toggle
validateAsYouGo
- support for complex form data structures including collections, nested objects and collections, etc
- support for collections with boilerplate management of persistent and temporary data
npm install @curiouser/react-forms
yarn add @curiouser/react-forms
A simple login form with validation that requires both fields to be filled in and a password of at least 6 characters.
import React from 'react';
import { Form, validator } from '@curiouser/react-forms';
import { PasswordField, TextField } from '@curiouser/react-forms';
import '@curiouser/react-forms/dist/index.css';
const formProps = {
formName: 'my-form',
initialValues: {
password: '',
username: '',
},
validations: [{
names: [ 'username', 'password' ],
tests: [[ validator.tests.required, validator.messages.required ]],
}, {
names: [ 'password' ],
tests: [[ validator.tests.minLength(6), validator.messages.minLength(6) ]],
}],
}
export default function MyForm () {
const form = React.useRef();
const handleSubmit = React.useCallback(() => {
if (!form.current.validate() || form.current.state.isLoading) return;
const formData = form.current.getData();
// do something with formData...
}, []);
return (
<Form ref={form} {...formProps}>
<form onSubmit={handleSubmit}>
<div className="form__fields">
<TextField label="Name" name="username" />
<PasswordField label="Password" name="password" />
</div>
<button type="submit">Sign in</button>
</form>
</Form>
);
}
import React from 'react';
import { Form, util, validator } from '@curiouser/react-forms';
import { PasswordField, TextField } from '@curiouser/react-forms';
import '@curiouser/react-forms/dist/index.css';
class MyForm extends Form {
static defaultProps = {
...Form.defaultProps,
formName: 'my-form',
initialValues: {
password: '',
username: '',
},
validations: [{
names: [ 'username', 'password' ],
tests: [[ validator.tests.required, validator.messages.required ]],
}, {
names: [ 'password' ],
tests: [
[ validator.tests.minLength(6), validator.messages.minLength(6) ],
[ validator.tests.minLength(8), () => `Password is weak, consider making it 8 characters or more`), { warning: true } ],
],
}],
};
constructor (...args) {
super(...args);
util.bindMethods(this);
}
handleSubmit () {
if (!this.validate() || this.state.isLoading) return;
const formData = this.getData();
// do something with formData...
}
render () {
return super.render(
<form className="form" onSubmit={this.handleSubmit}>
<div className="form__fields">
<TextField label="Name" name="username" />
<PasswordField label="Password" name="password" />
</div>
<button type="submit">Sign in</button>
</form>
);
}
}
Run all of the form examples in your browser with yarn start
. Here are some common examples:
- Render form with renderProp and read form values for dynamic rendering
- Store form data elsewhere (redux perhaps)
- Render a more complex form with a nested data structure
- Observe your form (share the state)
- React to form and field updates with onChange prop
Form fields are broken into two, one representing the field (with label, error messaging and className generation) and the actual input/control component.
import React from 'react';
import Field from 'form/dist/components/fields/Field.jsx';
import NativeSelect from './NativeSelect.jsx';
export default function NativeSelectField (props) {
return <Field {...props} ref={props.forwardedRef} component={NativeSelect} type="select" />
}
import React from 'react';
import { util } from '@curiouser/react-forms';
export default function NativeSelect ({ forwardedRef, getValue, id, options, placeholder, required = true, setValue }) {
const handleChange = React.useCallback((e) => setValue(e.target.value), [ setValue ]);
return (
<select id={id} onChange={handleChange} ref={forwardedRef} value={getValue()}>
{util.renderIf(placeholder, () => (
<option disabled={required} value="">{placeholder}</option>
))}
{options.map(o => (
<option key={o.value} value={o.value}>{o.label}</option>
))}
</select>
);
}
You're responsible for importing or linking the stylesheet with import '@curiouser/react-forms/dist/index.css';
or any other way you like, it's just a css file. The package styles don't try to do anything pretty for you, just provide functional styles. Class names try to follow the BEM naming convention.
The exported stylesheet predefines these CSS variables that you're encouraged to override.
.form {
--form-color-error: red;
--form-color-gray: #dedede;
--form-color-warning: #fc9403;
--form-field-height: 46px;
}
MIT © curiousercreative