Why not adopt me?
NAME
Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu - Catalyst integration for HTML::FormFu
VERSION
version 2.04
SYNOPSIS
package MyApp::Controller::My::Controller;
use Moose;
use namespace::autoclean;
BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu'; }
sub index : Local {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
# doesn't use an Attribute to make a form
# can get an empty form from $self->form()
my $form = $self->form();
}
sub foo : Local : Form {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
# using the Form attribute is equivalent to:
#
# my $form = $self->form;
#
# $form->process;
#
# $c->stash->{form} = $form;
}
sub bar : Local : FormConfig {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
# using the FormConfig attribute is equivalent to:
#
# my $form = $self->form;
#
# $form->load_config_filestem('root/forms/my/controller/bar');
#
# $form->process;
#
# $c->stash->{form} = $form;
#
# so you only need to do the following...
my $form = $c->stash->{form};
if ( $form->submitted_and_valid ) {
do_something();
}
}
sub baz : Local : FormConfig('my_config') {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
# using the FormConfig attribute with an argument is equivalent to:
#
# my $form = $self->form;
#
# $form->load_config_filestem('root/forms/my_config');
#
# $form->process;
#
# $c->stash->{form} = $form;
#
# so you only need to do the following...
my $form = $c->stash->{form};
if ( $form->submitted_and_valid ) {
do_something();
}
}
sub quux : Local : FormMethod('load_form') {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
# using the FormMethod attribute with an argument is equivalent to:
#
# my $form = $self->form;
#
# $form->populate( $c->load_form );
#
# $form->process;
#
# $c->stash->{form} = $form;
#
# so you only need to do the following...
my $form = $c->stash->{form};
if ( $form->submitted_and_valid ) {
do_something();
}
}
sub load_form {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
# Automatically called by the above FormMethod('load_form') action.
# Called as a method on the controller object, with the context
# object as an argument.
# Must return a hash-ref suitable to be fed to $form->populate()
}
You can also use specially-named actions that will only be called under certain circumstances.
sub edit : Chained('group') : PathPart : Args(0) : FormConfig { }
sub edit_FORM_VALID {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
my $form = $c->stash->{form};
my $group = $c->stash->{group};
$form->model->update( $group );
$c->response->redirect( $c->uri_for( '/group', $group->id ) );
}
sub edit_FORM_NOT_SUBMITTED {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
my $form = $c->stash->{form};
my $group = $c->stash->{group};
$form->model->default_values( $group );
}
METHODS
form
This creates a new HTML::FormFu object, passing as it's argument the contents of the "constructor" config value.
This is useful when using the ConfigForm() or MethodForm() action attributes, to create a 2nd form which isn't populated using a config-file or method return value.
sub foo : Local {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
my $form = $self->form;
}
Note that when using this method, the form's query method is not populated with the Catalyst request object.
SPECIAL ACTION NAMES
An example showing how a complicated action method can be broken down into smaller sections, making it clearer which code will be run, and when.
sub edit : Local : FormConfig {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
my $form = $c->stash->{form};
my $group = $c->stash->{group};
$c->detach('/unauthorised') unless $c->user->can_edit( $group );
if ( $form->submitted_and_valid ) {
$form->model->update( $group );
$c->response->redirect( $c->uri_for('/group', $group->id ) );
return;
}
elsif ( !$form->submitted ) {
$form->model->default_values( $group );
}
$self->_add_breadcrumbs_nav( $c, $group );
}
Instead becomes...
sub edit : Local : FormConfig {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
$c->detach('/unauthorised') unless $c->user->can_edit(
$c->stash->{group}
);
}
sub edit_FORM_VALID {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
my $group = $c->stash->{group};
$c->stash->{form}->model->update( $group );
$c->response->redirect( $c->uri_for('/group', $group->id ) );
}
sub edit_FORM_NOT_SUBMITTED {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
$c->stash->{form}->model->default_values(
$c->stash->{group}
);
}
sub edit_FORM_RENDER {
my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
$self->_add_breadcrumbs_nav( $c, $c->stash->{group} );
}
For any action method that uses a Form
, FormConfig
or FormMethod
attribute, you can add extra methods that use the naming conventions below.
These methods will be called after the original, plainly named action method.
_FORM_VALID
Run when the form has been submitted and has no errors.
_FORM_SUBMITTED
Run when the form has been submitted, regardless of whether or not there was errors.
_FORM_COMPLETE
For MultiForms, is run if the MultiForm is completed.
_FORM_NOT_VALID
Run when the form has been submitted and there were errors.
_FORM_NOT_SUBMITTED
Run when the form has not been submitted.
_FORM_NOT_COMPLETE
For MultiForms, is run if the MultiForm is not completed.
_FORM_RENDER
For normal Form
base classes, this subroutine is run after any of the other special methods, unless $form->submitted_and_valid
is true.
For MultiForm
base classes, this subroutine is run after any of the other special methods, unless $multi->complete
is true.
CUSTOMIZATION
You can set your own config settings, using either your controller config or your application config.
$c->config( 'Controller::HTML::FormFu' => \%my_values );
# or
MyApp->config( 'Controller::HTML::FormFu' => \%my_values );
# or, in myapp.conf
<Controller::HTML::FormFu>
default_action_use_path 1
</Controller::HTML::FormFu>
form_method
Override the method-name used to create a new form object.
See "form".
Default value: form
.
form_stash
Sets the stash key name used to store the form object.
Default value: form
.
form_attr
Sets the attribute name used to load the Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu::Action::Form action.
Default value: Form
.
config_attr
Sets the attribute name used to load the Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu::Action::Config action.
Default value: FormConfig
.
method_attr
Sets the attribute name used to load the Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu::Action::Method action.
Default value: FormMethod
.
form_action
Sets which package will be used by the Form() action.
Probably only useful if you want to create a sub-class which provides custom behaviour.
Default value: Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu::Action::Form
.
config_action
Sets which package will be used by the Config() action.
Probably only useful if you want to create a sub-class which provides custom behaviour.
Default value: Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu::Action::Config
.
method_action
Sets which package will be used by the Method() action.
Probably only useful if you want to create a sub-class which provides custom behaviour.
Default value: Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu::Action::Method
.
constructor
Pass common defaults to the HTML::FormFu constructor.
These values are used by all of the action attributes, and by the $self->form
method.
Default value: {}
.
config_callback
Arguments: bool
If true, a coderef is passed to $form->config_callback->{plain_value}
which replaces any instance of __uri_for(URI)__
found in form config files with the result of passing the URI
argument to "uri_for" in Catalyst.
The form __uri_for(URI, PATH, PARTS)__
is also supported, which is equivalent to $c->uri_for( 'URI', \@ARGS )
. At this time, there is no way to pass query values equivalent to $c->uri_for( 'URI', \@ARGS, \%QUERY_VALUES )
.
The second codeword that is being replaced is __path_to( @DIRS )__
. Any instance is replaced with the result of passing the DIRS
arguments to "path_to" in Catalyst. Don't use qoutationmarks as they would become part of the path.
Default value: 1
default_action_use_name
If set to a true value the action for the form will be set to the currently called action name.
Default value: false
.
default_action_use_path
If set to a true value the action for the form will be set to the currently called action path. The action path includes concurrent to action name additioal parameters which were code inside the path.
Default value: false
.
Example:
action: /foo/bar
called uri contains: /foo/bar/1
# default_action_use_name => 1 leads to:
$form->action = /foo/bar
# default_action_use_path => 1 leads to:
$form->action = /foo/bar/1
model_stash
Arguments: \%stash_keys_to_model_names
Used to place Catalyst models on the form stash.
If it's being used to make a DBIx::Class schema available for "options_from_model" in HTML::FormFu::Model::DBIC, for Select
and other Group-type elements - then the hash-key must be schema
. For example, if your schema model class is MyApp::Model::MySchema
, you would set model_stash
like so:
<Controller::HTML::FormFu>
<model_stash>
schema MySchema
</model_stash>
</Controller::HTML::FormFu>
context_stash
To allow your form validation packages, etc, access to the catalyst context, a weakened reference of the context is copied into the form's stash.
$form->stash->{context};
This setting allows you to change the key name used in the form stash.
Default value: context
languages_from_context
If you're using a L10N / I18N plugin such as Catalyst::Plugin::I18N which provides a languages
method that returns a list of valid languages to use for the currect request - and you want to use formfu's built-in I18N packages, then setting "languages_from_context"
localize_from_context
If you're using a L10N / I18N plugin such as Catalyst::Plugin::I18N which provides it's own localize
method, you can set localize_from_context to use that method for formfu's localization.
request_token_enable
If true, adds an instance of HTML::FormFu::Plugin::RequestToken to every form, to stop accidental double-submissions of data and to prevent CSRF attacks.
request_token_field_name
Defaults to _token
.
request_token_session_key
Defaults to __token
.
request_token_expiration_time
Defaults to 3600
.
DISCONTINUED CONFIG SETTINGS
config_file_ext
Support for this has now been removed. Config files are now searched for, with any file extension supported by Config::Any.
config_file_path
Support for this has now been removed. Use {constructor}{config_file_path}
instead.
CAVEATS
When using the Form
action attribute to create an empty form, you must call $form->process after populating the form. However, you don't need to pass any arguments to process
, as the Catalyst request object will have automatically been set in $form->query.
When using the FormConfig
and FormMethod
action attributes, if you make any modifications to the form, such as adding or changing it's elements, you must call $form->process before rendering the form.
AUTHORS
Carl Franks <cpan@fireartist.com>
Nigel Metheringham <nigelm@cpan.org>
Dean Hamstead <dean@bytefoundry.com.au>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2007-2018 by Carl Franks / Nigel Metheringham / Dean Hamstead.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
SUPPORT
Perldoc
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu
Websites
The following websites have more information about this module, and may be of help to you. As always, in addition to those websites please use your favorite search engine to discover more resources.
MetaCPAN
A modern, open-source CPAN search engine, useful to view POD in HTML format.
Search CPAN
The default CPAN search engine, useful to view POD in HTML format.
RT: CPAN's Bug Tracker
The RT ( Request Tracker ) website is the default bug/issue tracking system for CPAN.
https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Catalyst-Controller-HTML-FormFu
AnnoCPAN
The AnnoCPAN is a website that allows community annotations of Perl module documentation.
CPAN Ratings
The CPAN Ratings is a website that allows community ratings and reviews of Perl modules.
http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/Catalyst-Controller-HTML-FormFu
CPAN Forum
The CPAN Forum is a web forum for discussing Perl modules.
CPANTS
The CPANTS is a website that analyzes the Kwalitee ( code metrics ) of a distribution.
http://cpants.cpanauthors.org/dist/Catalyst-Controller-HTML-FormFu
CPAN Testers
The CPAN Testers is a network of smokers who run automated tests on uploaded CPAN distributions.
http://www.cpantesters.org/distro/C/Catalyst-Controller-HTML-FormFu
CPAN Testers Matrix
The CPAN Testers Matrix is a website that provides a visual overview of the test results for a distribution on various Perls/platforms.
http://matrix.cpantesters.org/?dist=Catalyst-Controller-HTML-FormFu
CPAN Testers Dependencies
The CPAN Testers Dependencies is a website that shows a chart of the test results of all dependencies for a distribution.
http://deps.cpantesters.org/?module=Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu
Bugs / Feature Requests
Please report any bugs or feature requests by email to bug-catalyst-controller-html-formfu at rt.cpan.org
, or through the web interface at https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Bug/Report.html?Queue=Catalyst-Controller-HTML-FormFu. You will be automatically notified of any progress on the request by the system.
Source Code
The code is open to the world, and available for you to hack on. Please feel free to browse it and play with it, or whatever. If you want to contribute patches, please send me a diff or prod me to pull from your repository :)
https://github.com/FormFu/Catalyst-Controller-HTML-FormFu
git clone https://github.com/FormFu/Catalyst-Controller-HTML-FormFu.git
CONTRIBUTORS
Aran Deltac <aran@ziprecruiter.com>
bricas <brian.cassidy@gmail.com>
dandv <ddascalescu@gmail.com>
fireartist <fireartist@gmail.com>
lestrrat <lestrrat+github@gmail.com>
marcusramberg <marcus.ramberg@gmail.com>
mariominati <mario.minati@googlemail.com>
Moritz Onken <1nd@gmx.de>
Moritz Onken <onken@netcubed.de>
Nigel Metheringham <nm9762github@muesli.org.uk>
omega <andreas.marienborg@gmail.com>
Petr Písař <ppisar@redhat.com>