react-jsonschema-form-pagination v0.4.0
react-jsonschema-form-pagination
Features
- Separation of huge schemas into navs
- Nested nav - you can have any number of navs nested inside your form
- Repeated fields - you can use the same field in multiple navs, filling it only once
- Does not conflict with other extensions of Mozilla project
Installation
Install react-jsonschema-form-pagination
by running:
npm install --s react-jsonschema-form-pagination
or
yarn add react-jsonschema-form-pagination
Usage
FormWithPagination is a wrapper for Mozilla's JSON Schema Form that allows a schema to be displayed into multiple Bootstrap navs. This allows users to see a subset of the schema on each nav.
Use this project as you would use Mozilla's JSON Schema Form (see their documentation), but to leverage the nav features just provide these extra parameters:
- In the
uiSchema
object, use the newnav
andnavConf
property for additional nav customization
To show case use of the pagination project, we'll be using following schema
as a base
const schema = {
title: "A registration form",
description: "A simple form example.",
type: "object",
properties: {
firstName: { type: "string" },
lastName: { type: "string" },
age: { type: "integer" },
phone: { type: "string" },
nickName: { type: "string" }
}
};
Single level
Let's say we have only 1 level of tabs main
and other
. We can do it like this:
import applyNavs from "react-jsonschema-form-pagination";
import Form from "react-jsonschema-form";
const uiSchema = {
firstName: {
"nav": "main"
},
lastName: {
"nav": "main"
},
age: {
"nav": "main"
},
phone: {
"nav": "main"
},
nickName: {
"nav": "other"
},
};
let FormWithPagination = applyNavs(Form);
render((
<FormWithPagination
schema={schema}
uiSchema={uiSchema}
/>
), document.getElementById("app"));
When rendered this configuration will show 2 tabs
main
nav withfirstName
,lastName
,age
andphone
fieldsother
nav withnickName
field
Multi nav levels
Let's say we now want to have main
nav divided in 2 more tabs general
(lastName
and age
) and other
( with phone
).
This is how uiSchema
should look like in order to do that :
const uiSchema = {
firstName: {
"nav": "main"
},
lastName: {
"nav": [ "main", "general" ]
},
age: {
"nav": [ "main", "general" ]
},
phone: {
"nav": [ "main", "other" ]
},
nickName: {
"nav": "other"
}
};
When rendered this configuration will show 2 tabs
main
nav withfirstName
, and 2 sub navsgeneral
withlastName
andage
fieldsother
withphone
field
other
nav withnickName
field
Default level
When you don't specify nav
, the field will be shown above the navs.
For example, if we go back to single level example, but we want to always see firstName
shown above the nav navigation.
Here is how we can do this:
const uiSchema = {
firstName: {},
lastName: {
"nav": "main"
},
age: {
"nav": "main"
},
phone: {
"nav": "main"
},
nickName: {
"nav": "other"
},
};
When rendered this configuration will show 2 navs and firstName
above the fields
main
nav withlastName
,age
andphone
fieldsother
nav withnickName
field
Field aliases in different tabs
One of the requirements for this project was to support same field on different tabs, in order to do that you can specify field alias
in uiSchema
. Field alias
is basically a field UI configuration, that will be used instead of original field in specified nav.
Aliases can be nested as regular fields.
For example, if we want to show firstName
in both tabs main
and other
.
const uiSchema = {
firstName: {
"nav": "main"
},
firsNameAlias: {
"nav": "other"
},
lastName: {
"nav": "main"
},
age: {
"nav": "main"
},
phone: {
"nav": "main"
},
nickName: {
"nav": "other"
},
navConf: {
aliases: {
firstName: "firsNameAlias"
}
}
};
With this configuration pagination will put firstName
in both main
and other
tabs.
navConf.aliases
is a simple object with
- keys - as original schema field names
- values - a string, or an array of strings, with uiSchema alias names
You can specify either single alias or as many aliases as you wish with an array.
Configuring nav presentation
Default presentation
By default nav
names are the same as nav
in uiSchema.
For example:
const uiSchema = {
firstName: {
"nav": "General"
},
lastName: {
"nav": "General"
},
age: {
"nav": "General"
},
phone: {
"nav": "General"
},
nickName: {
"nav": "General"
},
};
This schema would have a single nav General
, which might be good enough for your case.
Let's say you want different name and also add an icon to the nav
, here is how you can do that
const uiSchema = {
firstName: {
"nav": "g"
},
lastName: {
"nav": "General"
},
age: {
"nav": "General"
},
phone: {
"nav": "General"
},
nickName: {
"nav": "General"
},
navConf:{
navs: [
{
nav: "General",
name: "User",
icon: "glyphicons glyphicons-users"
}
]
}
}
In this case there will be a User
nav with glyphicons-users
icon.
By default name and icon are the only configuration for nav presentation, but you can customize Nav presentation as you wish with CustomNavs.
You can also
Custom navs
If you want to have a custom navs instead of nav-pills
used by default, you can provide Navs
component, when you call
applyPagination
import applyPagination from "react-jsonschema-form-pagination";
import Form from "react-jsonschema-form";
import CustomNavs from "./CustomNavs";
let FormWithPagination = applyPagination(Form, CustomNavs);
CustomNavs will receive 3 properties
navs
available navs at the layerlinks
all available nav links (which isnavConf.navs
configurations andisActive
flag)
onNavChange
- callback on nav selection change
Look at pagination for more details.
For example, if we want to use NavBar to navigate in paginated form, we can define CustomNav
like this
import React from "react";
import { GENERIC_NAV } from "react-jsonschema-form-pagination/lib/utils";
function CustomNavs({ navs: { links }, onNavChange }) {
let relLinks = links.filter(({ nav }) => nav !== GENERIC_NAV);
return (
<nav className="navbar navbar-default">
<div className="container-fluid">
<div className="collapse navbar-collapse">
<ul className="nav navbar-nav">
{relLinks.map(({ nav, name, icon, isActive }, i) => (
<li key={i} onClick={() => onNavChange(nav)} className={isActive ? "active" : null}>
<a>
{icon && <span className={icon} aria-hidden="true"/>}
{name || nav}
</a>
</li>
))}
</ul>
</div>
</div>
</nav>
);
}
export default CustomNavs;
Nav ordering
By default all tabs rendered in order they appear in uiSchema, since it's a primary source of layer reference,
however it's not reliable way to do so. You can override natural ordering with navConf.order
property in uiSchema
, consisting of ordered array of nav's.
It works the same way as ui:order
in mozilla project.
For example, in order to have
const uiSchema = {
navConf: {
order: [ "main", "sub", "other" ]
},
age: {
"nav": "sub"
},
phone: {
"nav": "main"
},
firstName: {
"nav": "main"
},
lastName: {
"nav": "main"
},
nickName: {
"nav": "other"
},
};
In this configuration, although sub
nav appears first in uiSchema
, main
will be the first nav available for selection.
Handling errors
To allow proper error management navigation component adds activeNav
to all the errors, so that you can add navigation to invalid data on validation errors.
You can use activeNav in errors in 2 ways
transformErrors
, that would appendactiveNav
to errormessage
,stack
or bothErrorList
that will geterrors
after transformation.
Migration
- From 0.3 - Navs can only be oriented horizontally, vertical orientation was removed to support better error handling
Contribute
- Issue Tracker: github.com/RxNT/react-jsonschema-form-pagination/issues
- Source Code: github.com/RxNT/react-jsonschema-form-pagination
Support
If you are having issues, please let us know.
License
The project is licensed under the Apache-2.0 license.
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