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@springernature/global-forms
Advanced tools
IMPORTANT: This is a release candidate representing an ambitious reworking of the global-forms component, including design tokens integration, at a component level, for the first time. It is expected to need some additional work before a full release can be made. Tokens are generated to the scss/00-tokens
folder and cannot be edited directly. If you need to temporarily add or override variables, please do this in a 10-settings
folder, one level down. The Elements Design System team will assess these changes for making these variables tokens later.
This component includes a number of form fields and related templates. It is designed to make it as simple as possible to create an HTML form.
The component does not include any JavaScript. States (such as an invalid/error state) are defined at a data level. If you're using client-side processing, you might benefit from compiling the form’s handlebars template in the browser.
First, include the necessary Sass files in your project.
// Include this with your settings
@import '@springernature/global-forms/scss/10-settings/default';
// Include this with your other components
@import '@springernature/global-forms/scss/50-components/forms';
// Include this with your utilities (if it isn’t already there)
@import '@springernature/brand-context/default/scss/60-utilities/buttons.scss';
Then you will need to register the handlebars partials in the /view
folder.
There are two options for rendering form fields:
view/fields
folder.demo/context.json
. For example, a group of fields used to let someone enter their address. In this case, you’ll have to iterate over a fieldsets
array something like this:<form action="some/url">
{{#with myFormData}}
{{#with errorSummary}}
{{> errorSummary }}
{{/with}}
{{#each fieldsets}}
{{> fieldset }}
{{/each}}
{{/with}}
</form>
Fieldsets are used to group fields itemised under their fields
property. If you do not want to include a (visible; screen reader identifiable) fieldset element or legend, simply omit the legend
property. The following example shows a simple form body with a single, unlabelled fieldset containing two text inputs:
"fieldsets": {
[
{
"fields": [
{
"template": "globalFormText",
"label": "Your name",
"id": "your-name",
"name": "your-name"
},
{
"template": "globalFormText",
"label": "Your email",
"id": "your-email",
"name": "your-email"
}
]
}
]
}
If you do wish to include a legend, you can use HTML to style it and add semantic meaning. In most cases, legends should be headings, with the heading level determined by the page structure.
"fieldsets": {
[
{
"legend": "<h2>My level 2 legend</h2>",
"fields": [
...
]
}
]
}
The template
property sets the type of field - for example, "template": "globalFormText"
renders a text input field if that is what you have registered the view/fields/globalFormText.hbs template as. Aim to make the template
, label
, id
, and name
properties mandatory parts of your data schema.
This component supports a wide range of standard form field attributes. For example, to include a readonly
attribute on your text input, you can include a property of the same name on the data:
{
"template": "globalFormText",
"label": "Your email address",
"id": "your-email",
"name": "your-email",
"readonly": true
}
The hint
property adds hint text under the main label text but inside the <label>
. This means it is automatically available to screen reader software.
"hint": "This will be the email address you used when registering"
The optional
property adds “(optional)” to the label text.
"optional": true
In addition to these top-level properties, you can add data properties as a dataAttrs
array, which can be useful for unit testing.
{
"template": "globalFormText",
"label": "Your email address",
"id": "your-email",
"name": "your-email",
"dataAttrs": {
"test": "someValue"
}
}
This would create the following attribution: data-test: someValue
.
Each field can have an error
property. The inclusion of the property means the field is in an error state. The property value (a string) defines the error message the user sees.
{
"template": "globalFormText",
"label": "Your name",
"id": "your-name",
"name": "your-name",
"error": "Enter your name"
}
You can summarise errors using a top level errorSummary
property adjacent to the fieldsets
property. Each error in the errors array must point to the id
of the input it relates to and repeat its error
message:
"errorSummary": {
"id": "summary",
"title": "There are problems",
"errors": [
{
"id": "your-name-error",
"error": "Enter your name"
},
{
"id": "checkbox-terms-error",
"error": "Agree to the terms to continue"
}
]
}
Select
fields (using the <select>
element) define the user’s options with an options
property, which must be an array. The selected
property is a Boolean:
"options": [
{
"label": "Horse",
"value": "Horse"
},
{
"label": "Platypus",
"value": "Platypus",
"selected": true
}
]
Radios define choices with an inputs
array:
{
"template": "globalFormRadios",
"label": "Animal",
"inputs": [
{
"label": "Horse",
"value": "Horse",
"name": "animal"
},
{
"label": "Monkey",
"value": "Monkey",
"name": "animal"
}
]
}
The name
property is placed at the top level and inherited by each input.
Radios are always grouped together in a fieldset
, so the group label (“Animal”, here) renders as a legend
not a label
.
You might want to show users an additional field when they select a particular radio. For example, revealing a text input field for them to give more specific information about the option they’ve selected.
These fields can have any properties of a standard form field. Set these properties using the fields
property (an array), like this:
{
"label": "Monkey",
"value": "Monkey",
"name": "animal",
"fields": [
{
"template": "globalFormText",
"label": "What type of monkey?",
"id": "monkey-type",
"name": "monkey-type",
"hint": "Chimps are not monkeys"
}
]
}
Unlike radios, which are always used in sets of two or more, you can have a single checkbox field. To give users a set of checkbox choices, organise the checkboxes into a fieldset
:
{
"legend": "<h2>Which animals do you like?</h2>",
"fields": [
{
"template": "globalFormCheckbox",
"label": "Monkeys",
"id": "checkbox-monkeys",
"name": "checkbox-monkeys"
},
{
"template": "globalFormCheckbox",
"label": "Horses",
"id": "checkbox-horses",
"name": "checkbox-horses"
}
]
}
A template
of buttons
defines a set of button controls, displayed inline (using Flexbox and gap
for tidy wrapping).
The type
property for each individual button corresponds to the type
HTML attribute. For example, here is how you would include a submit button:
"fields": [
...
{
"template": "globalFormButtons",
"buttons": [
{
"type": "submit",
"label": "Submit",
"modifiers": ["primary"]
}
]
}
]
The modifiers
property is an array. Each value should match one of these modifiers form the brand context’s button utility styles:
Text input fields can have a datalist
property, which lets you implement autocomplete. This takes two properties: id
and options
(an array):
"datalist": {
"id": "my-datalist",
"options": [
"monkey",
"horse",
"emu",
"platypus",
"cockroach",
"whale"
]
}
This builds a standard datalist
field, with option
s, and associates it with the input. If a datalist
already exists in the markup, provide just the id
and forego the option
property. If you want to use a custom-built autocomplete solution using JavaScript, omit the datalist
property from the field altogether.
FAQs
form component
The npm package @springernature/global-forms receives a total of 2,054 weekly downloads. As such, @springernature/global-forms popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @springernature/global-forms demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 15 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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