0.3.0 • Published 18 days ago

@atomicjolt/forms v0.3.0

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License
MIT
Repository
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Last release
18 days ago

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@atomicjolt/forms

@atomicjoplt/forms is a collection of React components for building forms, built on top of react-hook-form and atomic-elements.

Installation

npm install --save @atomicjolt/forms
yarn add @atomicjolt/forms

Usage

This library is essentially a wrapper around react-hook-form so it's probably a good idea to read it's docs to be at least somewhat familiar with it.

Basic Example

You must pass the name prop to each component in your form. This is the name that will be used to reference the value of the input in the onSubmit callback. If an input element does not have the name prop, it will not be included in the data in the onSubmit callback.

import { Form } from '@atomicjolt/forms';

const MyForm = () => {
   const onSubmit = (data) => {
     console.log(data);
     // { firstName: "John", lastName: "Doe", age: 21 }
   }

   return (
      <Form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
         <Form.TextInput name="firstName" label="First Name" />
         <Form.TextInput name="lastName" label="Last Name" />
         <Form.NumberInput name="age" label="Age" />
         <Form.SubmitButton>Submit</Form.SubmitButton>
      </Form>
   )
};

Default Values

import { Form  } from '@atomicjolt/forms';

const MyForm = () => {
   const onSubmit = (data) => {
     console.log(data);
     // { firstName: "John", lastName: "Doe", age: 21 }
   }

   return (
      <Form onSubmit={onSubmit} defaultValues={{ age: 20 }}>
         <Form.TextInput name="firstName" label="First Name" defaultValue="John" />
         <Form.TextInput name="lastName" label="Last Name" />
         <Form.NumberInput name="age" label="Age" />
         <Form.Submitbutton>Submit</Form.SubmitButton>
      </Form>
   )
};

Validations

Each component supports a set of pre-defined validations that can be passed in as props. These props essentially match the api of the react-hook-form register() function, but they're only exposed on the components that make sense. For example, the Form.TextInput component supports the minLength and maxLength props, and the Form.NumberInput component supports the minValue and maxValue props, but not vice versa.

import { Form  } from '@atomicjolt/forms';

const MyForm = () => {
   const onSubmit = (data) => {
     console.log(data);
   }

   return (
      <Form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
         <Form.TextInput
            name="firstName"
            label="First Name"
            minLength={{ value: 3, message: "Name must be 3 characters or longer" }}
            isRequired="First names is required"
         />
         <Form.TextInput
            name="lastName"
            label="Last Name"
            isRequired="Last name is Required"
         />
         <Form.NumberInput
            name="age"
            label="Age"
            minValue={{ value: 13, message: "You must be 13 or older to sign up" }}
         />
         <Form.SubmitButton>Submit</Form.SubmitButton>
      </Form>
   )
};

Attempting to submit the above form without valid data will result in the related error messages being displayed below each input & the form will not submit.

Custom Validations

import { Form, SubmitButton } from '@atomicjolt/forms';

const MyForm = () => {
   const onSubmit = (data) => {
     console.log(data);
   }

   return (
      <Form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
         <Form.TextInput name="firstName" label="First Name" />
         <Form.TextInput name="lastName" label="Last Name" />
         <Form.TextInput name="email" label="Email" validate={(value) => {
               if (!value) {
                  return "Email is required";
               }
               if (!value.includes("@")) {
                  return "Email must be valid";
               }
               return true;
            }
         }
         />
         <Form.SubmitButton>Submit</Form.SubmitButton>
      </Form>
   )
};

If you have multiple validations, you can also pass in an object

import { Form, SubmitButton } from '@atomicjolt/forms';

const MyForm = () => {
   const onSubmit = (data) => {
     console.log(data);
   }

   return (
      <Form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
         <Form.TextInput name="firstName" label="First Name" />
         <Form.TextInput name="lastName" label="Last Name" />
         <Form.TextInput name="email" label="Email" validate={{
            isEmail: (value) => {
               if (!value) {
                  return "Email is required";
               }
               if (!value.includes("@")) {
                  return "Email must be valid";
               }
               return true;
            }
            isDomainEmail: (value) => {
               if (!value) {
                  return "Email is required";
               }
               if (!value.includes("@domain.com")) {
                  return "Email must be from domain.com";
               }
               return true;
            }
         }}
         />
         <Form.SubmitButton>Submit</Form.SubmitButton>
      </Form>
   )
};

Custom Components

If you want to build your own custom form components, you can use the useFormContext hook to get access to the react-hook-form api.

import { useFormContext } from 'react-hook-form';

const MyForm = () => {
   const onSubmit = (data) => {
     console.log(data);
   }

   return (
      <Form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
         <Form.TextInput name="firstName" label="First Name" />
         <Form.TextInput name="lastName" label="Last Name" />
         <CustomInput />
      </Form>
   )
}

const CustomInput = () => {
   const { register } = useFormContext();

   return (
      <input {...register("nestedInput")} />
   )
}

FormProvider

If you want to use the useForm hook from react-hook-form directly, you can use the FormProvider component to pass the form methods down to your form components.

import { useForm } from 'react-hook-form';
import { FormProvider, Form } from '@atomicjolt/forms';

const MyForm = () => {
   const methods = useForm();

   const onSubmit = (data) => {
     console.log(data);
   }

   return (
      <FormProvider onSubmit={onSubmit} {...methods}>
         <Form.TextInput name="firstName" label="First Name" />
         <Form.TextInput name="lastName" label="Last Name" />
         <Form.NumberInput name="age" label="Age" />
         <Form.SubmitButton>Submit</Form.SubmitButton>
      </FormProvider>
   )
};

Submitting the Form

Note that the Form.SubmitButton component is not required. You can use any button you want to submit the form. The Form.SubmitButton component is just a convenience wrapper around atomic-element's Button component with the type="submit" prop set.

import { Form } from '@atomicjolt/forms';

const MyForm = () => {
   const onSubmit = (data) => {
     console.log(data);
     // { firstName: "John", lastName: "Doe", age: 21 }
   }

   // Will work just as well :)
   return (
      <Form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
         <Form.TextInput name="firstName" label="First Name" />
         <Form.TextInput name="lastName" label="Last Name" />
         <Form.NumberInput name="age" label="Age" />
         <button type="submit">Submit</button>
      </Form>
   )
};
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