NAME

Bread::Board::Manual::Example::FormSensible - A Form::Sensible and Catalyst example.

SYNOPSIS

__PACKAGE__->config(
    # ... your other Catalyst configs ...

    # first put our universal
    # FormBuilder container
    # inside the config
    FormBuilder => container 'FormBuilder' => [ 'Fields' ] => as {
        service 'Form' => (
            class => 'Form::Sensible',
            block => sub {
                my $s      = shift;
                my $c      = $s->parent;
                my $fields = $c->get_sub_container('Fields');
                my $form   = Form::Sensible::Form->new( name => $s->param('name') );
                foreach my $name ( $fields->get_service_list ) {
                    $form->add_field(
                        $fields->get_service( $name )->get
                    );
                }

                if ( my $state = $s->param('state') ) {
                    $form->set_values( $state );
                }

                $form;
            },
            parameters => {
                name  => { isa => 'Str'                    },
                state => { isa => 'HashRef', optional => 1 },
            }
        );
    },

    # Then we can build a set of
    # Fields for the 'foo' form
    Fields => {
        foo => container 'FooFields' => [ 'Model' ] => as {

              service 'Username' => (
                  class => 'Form::Sensible::Field::Text',
                  block => sub {
                      Form::Sensible::Field::Text->new(
                          name       => 'username',
                          validation => { regex => qr/^[0-9a-z]*$/ }
                      );
                  }
              );

              service 'Password' => (
                  class => 'Form::Sensible::Field::Text',
                  block => sub {
                      Form::Sensible::Field::Text->new(
                          name         => 'password',
                          render_hints => {
                              'HTML' => {
                                  field_type => 'password'
                              }
                          }
                      );
                  }
              );

              service 'Submit' => (
                  class => 'Form::Sensible::Field::Trigger',
                  block => sub {
                      Form::Sensible::Field::Trigger->new(
                          name => 'submit'
                      );
                  }
              );

              service 'AccessLevel' => (
                  class => 'Form::Sensible::Field::Select',
                  block => sub {
                      my $s = shift;
                      my $select = Form::Sensible::Field::Select->new(
                           name => 'access_level',
                      );
                      foreach my $access_level ( $s->param('schema')->resultset('AccessLevels')->all ) {
                          $select->add_option(
                              $access_level->id,
                              $access_level->name
                          );
                      }
                      $select;
                  },
                  dependencies => {
                      schema => depends_on('Model/schema') ,
                  },
              );
          }
    }
);


# later, in a
# catalyst action ...
sub process_foo : Local {
    my ($self, $c) = @_;
    my $Model = container 'Model' => as { service 'schema' => $c->model('DBIC') };
    my $Form  = $c->config->{FormBuilder}->create(
        Fields => $c->config->{Fields}->{foo}->create(
            Model => $Model
        )
    );

    my $f = $Form->resolve(
        service    => 'Form',
        parameters => {
            name  => 'foo',
            state => $c->req->parameters
        }
    );

    my $result = $f->validate;

    if ($result->is_valid) {
        # ...
    }
    else {
        # ...
    }
}

DESCRIPTION

This example came out of a discussion with Jay Kuri about how Bread::Board might be used in conjunction with his Form::Sensible module.

My idea was to create a generic form builder which is parameterized by a Fields container. This could be used to store all kind of application wide behaviors. Since this in the context of Catalyst it made sense to me for this to be stuffed into the Catalyst config hash. I also decided to use service parameters in the Form service, this allows you to pass in a specific name and to optionally pass in a captured state to the Form::Sensible::Form instance that is being created.

The next idea was that the Fields container parameter could be created for each specific form in the application. In the above example all the services are hardcoded, but this could be made more re-usable using the include keyword from Bread::Board itself, or some degree of subclassing of the Container objects.

Jay also asked about passing in the Catalyst model into the fields so that he could populate something like a select pulldown menu. Again I used parameterized modules, in this case we parameterized the FooFields container with a Model container which had a schema service (which was a DBIx::Class schema object).

From here we move into a Catalyst action to show how this might be used. We start out by wrapping the Catalyst DBIC model with a simple container, and then proceed to build our $Form object. The $Form is a Bread::Board container born of 3 levels of parameterized containers, it is worth spending a little time pondering exactly what is happening there.

So once we have the $Form container, all we need to do is create an instance of our Form::Sensible::Form, passing in the name and the captured state.

This example could likely be expanded even further to show the use of the Form::Sensible rendering as well. Further creative use of parameterized containers and a couple utility methods in the Catalyst controllers could produce fairly robust and easy to use API for an application.

AUTHOR

Stevan Little <stevan.little@iinteractive.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright 2010-2011 Infinity Interactive, Inc.

http://www.iinteractive.com

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.