springform

0.2.0 • Public • Published

Springform NPM version Build Status

Full-stack javascript form processing.

Springform is a minimial (mostly convetion) Presenter or View Model with just the right hooks to validate forms in the browser, submit them to a server, validate in node, and show the resulting errors.

Create just one form with a chainable interface:

var Springform = require('springform')
    robotForm = new Springform()
      .validator(Springform.required('sound'))
      .validator(function(form) {
        if(form.data.color != 'red') {
          form.fieldErrors.color = 'Pick a better color'
        }
      .validator(function (form, done) {
        make-a-request–or-run-a-query function (err, result) {
          form.formError = 'busted'
          done()
        }
      })

Or setup a prototype chain for a whole class of forms using a declarative syntax:

class RobotForm extends Springform
  validators: [
    Springform.required 'color'
    (form) ->
      {datafieldErrors} = form
      unless data.color is 'red'
        fieldErrors.color = 'Pick a better color'
 
    (form, done) ->
      Robot.count {sound: form.data.sound}(err, count) ->
        if count
          form.formError = 'Another robot already makes that sound'
        done()
  ]

Validate a form server-side

Here's how you might validate an XMLHttpRequest JSON form POST from an express controller, and send back validation errors to be shown on the client:

functinon (req, res) {
  var form = new RobotForm({data: req.body}).validate()
  if(form.hasErrors()) {
    res.json(form.errors())
  } else {
    res.json({})
  }
}

Show form errors client-side

You might use Rivets to bind a Springform form to the DOM:

var robot = {sound: 'beep', color: 'red'},
    form = new Springform({
      data: robot,
      save: function (done) {
        $.ajax({
          dataType: 'json',
          data: robot,
          success: function(response) {
            form.errors(response)
            if(!form.hasErrors()) {
              alert('done!')
            }
            done()
          }
        })
      })
    })

rivets.bind(formEl, form)

Generate form HTML

Springform doesn't do this. You might think of a Springform as a Presenter or View Model that you can use to generate application specific form markup, and that you can bind to. Ribosprite is an example to get you started.

Error Representation

Springforms pass around error messages with this structure:

{
  formError: < ... >,
  fieldErrors: {
    <fieldName>: < ... >,
    <otherFieldName>: < ... >
  }
}

You'll get an object like this representing the forms current errors by calling form.errors(). If you format a JSON response with this structure, you can pass the reponse directly to the the errors method (form.errors(res.body)) to set errors on the form.

There a couple useful conventions for the values in the errors object. The simplest is to set a user-facing error message:

{formError: "Oops... Something went wrong..."}

To flag a field as having problem without adding a message, use Boolean true:

{fieldErrors: {sound: true}}

If you need to localize later, or you'd rather just keep the messages client-side, send a code:

{fieldErrors: {sound: 'required'}}

Validators

Validators are functions with the signature (form, [done]). Validators in Springform have two important responsiblities:

  1. They set or select a user-facing error messages.
  2. They decide if messages are displayed near a single field, or apply to the whole form.

These two reponsibilities are application specific. One app might list all required fields at the top of the form, another might flag each missing field individually. You should definitely compose your validators using existing libraries (like chriso/validator.js), but you'll need to add the two responsibilities above following the conventions of your app.

Validators can by syncronous or asyncronous.

Simple

The simplest validators are syncronous. They just assign error messages to the passed in form:

function(form) {
  if(form.data.color != 'red') {
    form.fieldErrors.color = 'Pick a better color'
  }
}

Async

If your validator does something slow like talk to the database or make a network request, accept a second done argument and call it when you're done:

function(form, done) {
  Robot.count({sound: form.data.sound}, function(err, count) {
    if(count) {
      form.formError = 'Another robot already makes that sound'
    }
    done()
  });
}

API

set('data', {...})

Chainable sugar to set form.data. Feel free to set form.data directly if you don't need chainability.

hasErrors()

Returns true if formError or any fieldErrors[*] is truthy.

validate([done])

Clear formError and fieldErrors then run all the validators. You can always pass a callback, to be called when all validators have finished. It's an especially good idea if any of your validators are async.

addValidator(validatorFn)

Chainable sugar to push a validator function onto validators to be run when validate() is called.

validators

An array of validator function to run when validate() is called. You can set validators directly, set it on a prototype, or call validator() to add validators one at a time.

submit([event])

Call save() and set the saving flag while it's running. Calls preventDefault() on the passed in event if used as an event listener.

save(done)

An async function that does the work of submitting the form. Could be an Ajax POST, a model.save(), or something else entirely. Be sure to call done if you want to unlock form re-submission. Save functions frequently call some combination of validate(), errors({...}), and hasErrors(). Define this function on an instance, on a prototype, or pass it in to set().

saving

A boolean flag that's true while the form is saving.

set('save', saveFn)

Chainable sugar to set save.

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