1Catalyst::Controller::FUosremrBuCiolndterri(b3u)ted PerlCaDtoacluymsetn:t:aCtoinotnroller::FormBuilder(3)
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6 Catalyst::Controller::FormBuilder - Catalyst FormBuilder Base
7 Controller
8
10 package MyApp::Controller::Books;
11 use base 'Catalyst::Controller::FormBuilder';
12
13 # optional config setup
14 __PACKAGE__->config(
15 'Controller::FormBuilder' = {
16 template_type => 'HTML::Template', # default is 'TT' (e.g. TT2)
17 }
18 );
19
20 # looks for books/edit.fb form configuration file, based on the presence of
21 # the ":Form" attribute.
22 sub edit : Local Form {
23 my ( $self, $c, @args ) = @_;
24
25 my $form = $self->formbuilder;
26
27 # add email form field to fields already defined edit.fb
28 $form->field( name => 'email', validate => 'EMAIL' );
29
30 if ( $form->submitted ) {
31 if ( $form->validate ) {
32 return $c->response->body("VALID FORM");
33 }
34 else {
35 $c->stash->{ERROR} = "INVALID FORM";
36 $c->stash->{invalid_fields} =
37 [ grep { !$_->validate } $form->fields ];
38 }
39 }
40 }
41
42 # explicitedly use books/edit.fb, otherwise books/view.fb is used
43 sub view : Local Form('/books/edit') {
44 my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
45 $c->stash->{template} = "books/edit.tt" # TT2 template;
46 }
47
49 This base controller merges the functionality of CGI::FormBuilder with
50 Catalyst and the following templating systems: Template Toolkit, Mason
51 and HTML::Template. This gives you access to all of FormBuilder's
52 niceties, such as controllablefield stickiness, multilingual support,
53 and Javascript generation. For more details, see CGI::FormBuilder or
54 the website at:
55
56 http://www.formbuilder.org
57
58 FormBuilder usage within Catalyst is straightforward. Since Catalyst
59 handles page rendering, you don't call FormBuilder's "render()" method,
60 as you would normally. Instead, you simply add a ":Form" attribute to
61 each method that you want to associate with a form. This will give you
62 access to a FormBuilder "$self->formbuilder" object within that
63 controller method:
64
65 # An editing screen for books
66 sub edit : Local Form {
67 my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
68 $self->formbuilder->method('post'); # set form method
69 }
70
71 The out-of-the-box setup is to look for a form configuration file that
72 follows the CGI::FormBuilder::Source::File format (essentially YAML),
73 named for the current action url. So, if you were serving
74 "/books/edit", this plugin would look for:
75
76 root/forms/books/edit.fb
77
78 (The path is configurable.) If no source file is found, then it is
79 assumed you'll be setting up your fields manually. In your controller,
80 you will have to use the "$self->formbuilder" object to create your
81 fields, validation, and so on.
82
83 Here is an example "edit.fb" file:
84
85 # Form config file root/forms/books/edit.fb
86 name: books_edit
87 method: post
88 fields:
89 title:
90 label: Book Title
91 type: text
92 size: 40
93 required: 1
94 author:
95 label: Author's Name
96 type: text
97 size: 80
98 validate: NAME
99 required: 1
100 isbn:
101 label: ISBN#
102 type: text
103 size: 20
104 validate: /^(\d{10}|\d{13})$/
105 required: 1
106 desc:
107 label: Description
108 type: textarea
109 cols: 80
110 rows: 5
111
112 submit: Save New Book
113
114 This will automatically create a complete form for you, using the
115 specified fields. Note that the "root/forms" path is configurable; this
116 path is used by default to integrate with the "TTSite" helper.
117
118 Within your controller, you can call any method that you would on a
119 normal "CGI::FormBuilder" object on the "$self->formbuilder" object.
120 To manipulate the field named "desc", simply call the "field()" method:
121
122 # Change our desc field dynamically
123 $self->formbuilder->field(
124 name => 'desc',
125 label => 'Book Description',
126 required => 1
127 );
128
129 To populate field options for "country", you might use something like
130 this to iterate through the database:
131
132 $self->formbuilder->field(
133 name => 'country',
134 options =>
135 [ map { [ $_->id, $_->name ] } $c->model('MyApp::Country')->all ],
136 other => 1, # create "Other:" box
137 );
138
139 This would create a select list with the last element as "Other:" to
140 allow the addition of more countries. See CGI::FormBuilder for methods
141 available to the form object.
142
143 The FormBuilder methodolody is to handle both rendering and validation
144 of the form. As such, the form will "loop back" onto the same
145 controller method. Within your controller, you would then use the
146 standard FormBuilder submit/validate check:
147
148 if ( $self->formbuilder->submitted && $self->formbuilder->validate ) {
149 $c->forward('/books/save');
150 }
151
152 This would forward to "/books/save" if the form was submitted and
153 passed field validation. Otherwise, it would automatically re-render
154 the form with invalid fields highlighted, leaving the database
155 unchanged.
156
157 To render the form in your tt2 template for example, you can use
158 "render" to get a default table-based form:
159
160 <!-- root/src/books/edit.tt -->
161 [% FormBuilder.render %]
162
163 You can also get fine-tuned control over your form layout from within
164 your template.
165
167 The simplest way to get your form into HTML is to reference the
168 "FormBuilder.render" method, as shown above. However, frequently you
169 want more control.
170
171 Only Template Toolkit, Mason and HTML::Template are currently
172 supported, but if your templating system's stash requirements are
173 identical to one of these, simply choose and define it via the
174 "template_type" config option. Of course, make sure you have a View to
175 support the template, since this module does not render templates.
176
177 From within your template, you can reference any of FormBuilder's
178 methods to manipulate form HTML, JavaScript, and so forth. For example,
179 you might want exact control over fields, rendering them in a "<div>"
180 instead of a table. You could do something like this:
181
182 <!-- root/src/books/edit.tt -->
183 <head>
184 <title>[% formbuilder.title %]</title>
185 [% formbuilder.jshead %]<!-- javascript -->
186 </head>
187 <body>
188 [% formbuilder.start -%]
189 <div id="form">
190 [% FOREACH field IN formbuilder.fields -%]
191 <p>
192 <label>
193 <span [% IF field.required %]class="required"[%END%]>[%field.label%]</span>
194 </label>
195 [% field.field %]
196 [% IF field.invalid -%]
197 <span class="error">
198 Missing or invalid entry, please try again.
199 </span>
200 [% END %]
201 </p>
202 [% END %]
203 <div id="submit">[% formbuilder.submit %]</div>
204 <div id="reset">[% formbuilder.reset %]</div>
205 </div>
206 </div>
207 [% formbuilder.end -%]
208 </body>
209
210 In this case, you would not call "FormBuilder.render", since that would
211 only result in a duplicate form (once using the above expansion, and a
212 second time using FormBuilder's default rendering).
213
214 Note that the above form could become a generic "form.tt" template
215 which you simply included in all your files, since there is nothing
216 specific to a given form hardcoded in (that's the idea, after all).
217
218 You can also get some ideas based on FormBuilder's native Template
219 Toolkit support at CGI::FormBuilder::Template::TT2.
220
222 You can set defaults for your forms using Catalyst's config method
223 inside your controller.
224
225 __PACKAGE__->config(
226 'Controller::FormBuilder' => {
227 new => {
228 method => 'post',
229 # stylesheet => 1,
230 messages => '/locale/fr_FR/form_messages.txt',
231 },
232 form_path =>
233 File::Spec->catfile( $c->config->{home}, 'root', 'forms' ),
234 method_name => 'form',
235 template_type => 'HTML::Template',
236 stash_name => 'form',
237 obj_name => 'FormBuilder',
238 form_suffix => 'fb',
239 attr_name => 'Form',
240 source_type => 'CGI::FormBuilder::Source::File',
241 }
242 );
243
244 "new"
245 This accepts the exact same options as FormBuilder's "new()" method
246 (which is a lot). See CGI::FormBuilder for a full list of options.
247
248 "form_path"
249 The path to configuration files. This should be set to an absolute
250 path to prevent problems. By default, it is set to:
251
252 File::Spec->catfile( $c->config->{home}, 'root', 'forms' )
253
254 This can be a colon-separated list of directories if you want to
255 specify multiple paths (ie, "/templates1:/template2"), or an array
256 ref (ie, [qw/template1 templates2/]).
257
258 "form_suffix"
259 The suffix that configuration files have. By default, it is "fb".
260
261 "method_name"
262 Accessor method name available in your controller. By default, it
263 is "formbuilder".
264
265 "template_type"
266 Defines the Catalyst View that the stash will be prepared for.
267 Possible values are: HTML::Template, Mason, TT. By default, it is
268 "TT".
269
270 "stash_name"
271 Not applicable for HTML::Template view. By default, it is
272 "formbuilder". e.g. $c->stash->{formbuilder} =
273 $formbuilder->prepare.
274
275 "obj_name"
276 Not applicable for HTML::Template view. By default, it is
277 "FormBuilder". e.g. $c->stash->{FormBuilder} = $formbuilder.
278
279 "attr_name"
280 The attribute name. By default, it is "Form". e.g. sub edit : Form
281 { ... }
282
283 "source_type"
284 The source adapter class name. By default, it is
285 "CGI::FormBuilder::Source::File". See CGI::FormBuilder::Source
286
287 In addition, the following FormBuilder options are automatically set
288 for you:
289
290 "action"
291 This is set to the URL for the current action. FormBuilder is
292 designed to handle a full request cycle, meaning both rendering and
293 submission. If you want to override this, simply use the
294 "$self->formbuilder" object:
295
296 $self->formbuilder->action('/action/url');
297
298 The default setting is "$c->req->path".
299
300 "cookies"
301 Handling these are disabled (use Catalyst).
302
303 "debug"
304 This is set to correspond with Catalyst's debug setting.
305
306 "header"
307 This is disabled. Instead, use Catalyst's header routines.
308
309 "params"
310 This is set to get parameters from Catalyst, using "$c->req". To
311 override this, use the "$self->formbuilder" object:
312
313 $self->formbuilder->params(\%param_hashref);
314
315 Overriding this is not recommended.
316
317 "source"
318 This determines which source file is loaded, to setup your form. By
319 default, this is set to the name of the action URL, with ".fb"
320 appended. For example, "edit_form()" would be associated with an
321 "edit_form.fb" source file.
322
323 To override this, include the path as the argument to the method
324 attribute:
325
326 sub edit : Local Form('/books/myEditForm') { }
327
328 If no source file is found, then it is assumed you'll be setting up
329 your fields manually. In your controller, you will have to use the
330 "$self->formbuilder" object to create your fields, validation, and
331 so on.
332
334 CGI::FormBuilder, CGI::FormBuilder::Source::File,
335 CGI::FormBuilder::Template::TT2, Catalyst::Manual, Catalyst::Request,
336 Catalyst::Response
337
339 Copyright (c) 2006 Juan Camacho <formbuilder@suspenda.com>. All Rights
340 Reserved.
341
342 Thanks to Laurent Dami and Roy-Magne Mo for suggestions.
343
344 This library is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it
345 under the same terms as Perl itself.
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349perl v5.28.0 2011-01-2C6atalyst::Controller::FormBuilder(3)