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angular-formly

AngularJS directive which takes JSON representing a form and renders to HTML

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Formly

Formly for Angular is an AngularJS module which has directives to help customize and render JSON based forms. The directive originated from a need to allow our users to create surveys and distribute them easily. Currently we've can render the form data from JSON and assign a model to form so we can receive the submitted data.

<formly-form model="formData" fields="formFields"></formly-form>

Demo : http://formly-js.github.io/angular-formly/

Dependencies

  • Required to use Formly:

  • Angular

  • Dev dependencies to build Formly

  • npm

Install in your project

  1. Install with Bower or npm $ bower install angular-formly --save or $ npm install angular-formly --save

  2. Include the javascript file in your index.html, Formly without any form templates. You can create your own or use some of our prebuilt templates which cover basic form types, then extend with your own as needed.

<script src="bower_components/angular-formly/dist/formly.min.js"></script> and angular.module('yourModule', ['formly']);

or angular.module('yourModule', [require('angular-formly')]);

Prebuilt Templates

While it is recommended to create your own templates for ultimate customization and flexibility, there are prebuilt templates you can use:

DIY Templates

Regardless of which flavor you use (or if you use no flavor at all), you can create your own templates with formlyConfigProvider. This is the recommended approach if you want to customize your templates at all.

Documentation

Note: This README.md is for the latest version of formly. There have been some changes in the latest version which is not stable. For documentation on the latest stable version, see the 1.0.0 documentation

Example

Here's an example using the vanilla template properties

You can add a formly-form in your HTML templates as shown below.

<formly-form model="formData" fields="formFields">
	<button ng-click="onSubmit()">Hello World</button>
</formly-form>

Example data as it would be set in the controller

$scope.formData = {};
$scope.formFields = [
	{
		//the key to be used in the model values {... "username": "johndoe" ... }
		key: 'username',

		type: 'text',
		label: 'Username',
		placeholder: 'johndoe',
		required: true,
		disabled: false, //default: false
		description: 'Descriptive text'
	},
	{
		key: 'password',
		type: 'password',
		label: 'Password',
		required: true,
		disabled: false, //default: false
		expressionProperties: {
			hide: '!model.username' // hide when username is blank
		}
	}

];

$scope.onSubmit = function() {
	console.log('form submitted:', $scope.formData);
};

Creating Form Fields

When constructing fields use the options below to customize each field object. You must set at least a type, template, or templateUrl.

type (string)

type is the type of field to be rendered. Either type, template, or templateUrl must be set.

Default

null

Values

depends on the template set you're using. See documentation for the specific fieldset you are using.


template (string)

template can be set instead of type or templateUrl to use a custom html template form field. Should be used with one-liners mostly (like a directive). Useful for adding functionality to fields.

Note: This can be used to add HTML instead of a form field.

Examples:

template: '<p>Some text here</p>'
template: '<hr />'
Default

undefined


templateUrl (string)

templateUrl can be set instead of type or template to use a custom html template form field. Set a path relative to the root of the application. ie directives/custom-field.html

Default

undefined


key (string)

By default form models are keyed by location in the form array, you can override this by specifying a key.

Default

undefined


hide (boolean)

Whether to hide the field (uses ng-if)

Default

undefined


model (object)

By default, the model passed to the formly-field directive is the same as the model passed to the formly-form. However, if the field has a model specified, then the specified model is used for that field (and that field only). Also, a deep watch is added to the formly-field directive's scope to run the expressionProperties when the specified model changes.

Default

undefined


expressionProperties (object)

expressionProperties is an object where the key is a property to be set on the main field config (can be an angular expression) and the value is an expression used to assign that property. The expression can be a function or string expression and will be evaluated using formlyEval from formlyUtils see below for more information. The returned value is wrapped in $q.when so you can return a promise from your function :-)

For example:

vm.fields = [
  {
    key: 'myThing',
    type: 'someType',
    expressionProperties: {
      'templateOptions.label': '$viewValue', // this would make the label change to what the user has typed
      'data.someproperty.somethingdeeper.whateveryouwant': 'model.myThing.length > 5' // this would set that property on data to be whether or not the model's myThing value has a length greater than 5
    }
  }
];
Default

undefined


data (*)

data is reserved for the developer. You have our guarantee to be able to use this and not worry about future versions of formly overriding your usage and preventing you from upgrading :-)

Default

undefined


templateOptions (*)

templateOptions is reserved for the templates. Any template-specific options go in here. Look at your specific template implementation to know the options required for this.

Default

undefined


wrapper (string|array of strings)

wrapper makes reference to setWrapper in the formlyConfigProvider. It is expected to be the name of the wrapper specified there. The formly field will be wrapped by the first wrapper, then the second, then the third, etc.

Default

undefined


ngModelAttrs (object)

ngModelAttrs is used in an angular-formly created templateManipulator to automatically add attributes to the ng-model element of field templates. There are two properties: bound and unbound. In both cases, the key is the attribute to add to the ng-model element. In the unbound case, the value will be evaluated on the field's scope, and assigned to the attribute (not bound). In the bound case, the property will be assigned as the value (for example: the value 'ng-pattern': /abc/ would result in: ng-pattern="options.ngModelAttrs['ng-pattern']" which, ultimately, would result in ng-pattern="/abc/" where /abc/ is bound to the value of options.ngModelAttrs['ng-pattern'] and therefore, can be changed via expressionProperties.

Default

undefined


optionsTypes (string|array of strings)

optionsTypes allows you to specify extra types to get options from. Duplicate options are overridden in later priority (index 1 will override index 0 properties). Also, these are applied after the type's defaultOptions and hence will override any duplicates of those properties as well.

Default

undefined


modelOptions (object)

modelOptions is used to make your templates easier to work with. Normally, you would have to do this in each of your templates: ng-model="model[options.key || index]". However, if you like, you can take advantage of ng-model-options via the modelOptions property. This will allow you to do ng-model="value" ng-model-options="options.modelOptions" not necessarily less verbose, but a little easier to understand. To accomplish this, each formly-field adds a value function on the scope. It is a traditional getter/setter for you to use in your templates. For more information on ng-model-options, see these egghead lessons.

Default

{ getterSetter: true, allowInvalid: true }


watcher (object|array of watches)

watcher is an object which has at least two properties called expression and listener. The watch.expression is added to the formly-form directive's scope. If it's a function, it will be wrapped and called with the field as the first argument, followed by the normal arguments for a watcher, followed the watcher's stop function. If it's not defined, it will default to the value of the field. The listener will also be wrapped and called with the field as the first argument, followed by the normal arguments for a watch listener. You can also specify a type ($watchCollection or $watchGroup) via the type property (defaults to $watch) and whether you want it to be a deep watch via the deep property (defaults to false).

How the api differs from a normal $watch:

// normal watcher
$scope.$watch(function expression(theScope) {}, function listener(newValue, oldValue, theScope) {});

// field watcher
$scope.$watch(function expression(field, theScope, stop) {}, function listener(field, newValue, oldValue, theScope, stop) {});
Default

undefined


validators (object)

validators is an object where the keys are the name of the validity (to be passed to $setValidity) and the values are functions or expressions which returns true if it is valid. Templates can pass this option to the formly-custom-validation directive which will add a parser (or validator, see note) to the ngModel controller of the field. The validator can be a function or string expression and will be evaluated using formlyEval from formlyUtils see below for more information. Note: Formly will utilize the $validators pipeline (introduced in angular 1.3) if available, otherwise it will fallback to $parsers. If you are using angular 1.3, formly will automatically use the $asyncValidators pipeline if your validator is a function (and wrap it in $q.when so you don't need to worry about returning a promise if that doesn't make sense for your validator). Note, in this case, all the normal $asyncValidators rules apply. To fail the validation, reject the promise. Also, note the performance implications when you mix sync and non-sync validators: https://github.com/angular/angular.js/issues/10955 (not a problem if your validators are not actually costing resources, or if you make the sync validators strings instead of functions).

Default

undefined

Other Notes

CSS Classes

The resulting form element has the class formly and each field has the class formly-field.

Validation

Formly uses angular's built-in validation mechanisms. See the angular docs for more information on this. (Note, if you're using Angular 1.3, formly utilizies the new $validators and $asyncValidators pipelines, otherwise, it falls back to good old $parsers. Either way, your API is the same, though you can't do asynchornous validation with 1.2.x).

The form controller is bound to what you specify as the form attribute on the formly-form directive. Make sure to specify a name on any ng-model in your custom templates to ensure that the formControl is added to the options. If you're using Angular 1.3, the name attribute is interpolateable (you can use {{id}}). If you are stuck on 1.2.x, you can use the formly-dynamic-name directive where the value is an expression which would return the name (so, formly-dynamic-name="id"). Formly will add a formControl property to the field, and you can reference that in your template with options.formControl to get access to properties like $invalid or $error. See the bootstrap templates for an example.

You can also specify custom validation in your JSON. See the field called validators for more information on this. If you wish to leverage this in a custom template, use the formly-custom-validation directive and pass options.validators to it.

Global Config

formlyConfigProvider

You can configure formly to use custom templates for specified types (your own "text" template) by injecting the formlyConfigProvider in your app's config function. The formlyConfigProvider has the following functions:

setType

Allows you to specify a custom type

// object api (single type with a template)
formlyConfig.setType({
  name: 'input',
  template: '<input ng-model="[options.key]" />'
});
// with a templateUrl
formlyConfig.setType({
  name: 'checkbox',
  templateUrl: 'custom-formly-fields-checkbox.html'
});

// array api (multiple types)hi
formlyConfig.setType([
  {
    name: 'radio',
    templateUrl: 'custom-formly-fields-radio.html'
  },
  {
    name: 'button',
    templateUrl: '<button ng-click="options.templateOptions">{{options.label</button>'
  }
]);

// also, you can specify wrappers for a type
formlyConfig.setType({
  name: 'select',
  templateUrl: 'custom-formly-fields-select.html',
  wrapper: ['inner', 'outer', 'evenOuterOuter']
});

// you can also set default options for fields of this type. This can be done with or without a template or templateUrl
// useful when combined with the field's `optionsTypes` property.
formlyConfig.setType({
  name: 'phone',
  defaultOptions: {
    ngModelAttrs: {
      bound: {
        'ng-pattern': /^1[2-9]\d{2}[2-9]\d{6}$/
      }
    }
  }
});
setWrapper, getWrapper, getWrapperByType, removeWrapperByName, & removeWrappersForType

Allows you to set a template for your formly templates. You can have a default (used by all templates), named template wrappers, and typed template wrappers (used by fields with the specified type). All template wrappers must follow these rules

  • Use <formly-transclude></formly-transclude> in them to specify where the field template should be placed.
  • Have at least one, and only one of templateUrl or template
  • Not override another by name or type

For example:

// simple argument api
formlyConfigProvider.setWrapper('<div>This is the default because <formly-transclude></formly-transclude> there is no name specified</div>');
formlyConfigProvider.setWrapper('<div>This is not the default because <formly-transclude></formly-transclude> there is a name specified</div>', 'theName');

// object api
formlyConfigProvider.setWrapper({
  name: 'inputWrapper', // optional. Defaults to name || types.join(' ') || 'default'
  template: 'the template with <formly-transclude></formly-transclude> in it', // must have this OR templateUrl
  templateUrl: 'path/to/template.html', // the resulting template MUST have <formly-transclude></formly-transclude> in it and must have templateUrl OR template (not both)
  types: 'stringOrArray' // this can be a string or an array of strings that map to types specified by setTemplate and setTemplateUrl
});

// array api
formlyConfigProvider.setWrapper([
  { /* same configuration as the object api */ },
  { /* same configuration as the object api */ },
  { /* same configuration as the object api */ },
  { /* same configuration as the object api */ }
]);

removeWrapperByName and removeWrappersForType are helpful if you're using a template library but want to customize your own wrappers. The api is simple:

formlyConfigProvider.removeWrapperByName('inputWrapper'); // removes the wrapper that's called 'inputWrapper'
formlyConfigProvider.removeWrappersForType('select'); // removes all wrappers that apply to the type of 'select'

Also, note, that if you want to remove the default wrapper, this is done by passing 'default' to the removeWrapperByName function.

Another note, you can instead override wrappers (and types as well) without a warning if you specify an overwriteOk: true property.

See the website for examples on usage

templateManipulators

This allows you to manipulate the template of a specific field. This gives you a great deal of power without sacrificing performance by having bindings which you will never need as well as save repetition in your templates. The api to this feature is as follows:

// note, most of the formlyConfigProvider functions can
// actually be done in the `run` function as well using `formlyConfig`.
formlyConfigProvider.templateManipulators.preWrapper.push(function(template, options, scope) {
  // determine if you wish to do anything with this template,
  // manipulated as needed, and return either the old template,
  // the new template, or a promise that will resolve with the
  // new template... for example
  if (options.data.addWarningMessage) {
    return template + '<div>This is a warning message!!!</div>';
  } else {
    return template;
  }
});

// or, if you wanted to load a template, you would do it in the
// run function so you can get $http, and $templateCache, then do:
formlyConfig.templateManipulators.preWrapper.push(function(template, options, scope) {
  return $http.get('the/template.html', {cache: $templateCache}).then(function(response) {
    return response.data.replace('where-the-template-goes', template);
  });
});

Note! There is a built-in templateManipulator that automatically adds attributes to the ng-model element of your templates for you. Here are the things you need to know about it:

  • It will never override existing attributes
  • To prevent it from running on your field, simply set data: {noTouchy: true} and this template manipulator will skip yours
  • It wont do anything to the template if it can't find any elements with the attribute ng-model.
  • It first goes through the bound and unbound ngModelAttrs specified for the field (read more about that above)
  • It adds a name and id attribute (the scope.id for both of them)
  • It adds the formly-custom-validation directive if the field has options.validators
  • It adds a bunch of ng- attributes if the corresponding value is present on templateOptions or in expressionProperties. You can specify additional ng- attributes with the data.ngModelBoundAttributes property.
  • It adds a handful of normal html attributes if the corresponding value is present on templateOptions or in expressionProperties. These will be added as {{expressions}}.

This is incredibly powerful because it makes the templates require much less bloat AND it allows you to avoid paying the cost of watchers that you'd never use (like a field that will never be required for example).

disableWarnings

Formly gives some useful warnings when you attempt to use a template that doesn't exist or there's a problem loading a template. You can disable these warnings via formlyConfigProvider.disableWarnings = true

Tips and Tricks

Please see the Wiki for tips and tricks from the community.

Expressions

There are four places where you can put expressions. The context in which these expressions are evaluated is important. There are two different types of context and each is explained below:

  1. watcher - expression and listener can be functions or expression strings. This is a regular angular $watch (depending on the specified type) function and it is created on the formly-form scope, despite being applied to a specific field. This allows the expressions to run even if the field's scope has been destroyed (via an ng-if like when the field is hidden). The function signature differs from a normal $watch however. See above for more details.

  2. expressionProperties & validators - these expressions can be functions or expression strings. If it's a function, it's invoked with the arguments $viewValue, $modelValue, and scope. The scope in this case, is the field's scope. If it's an expression string, it is evaluated using $scope.$eval with a locals object that has $viewValue and $modelValue (however, in the case of expressionProperties, $viewValue will simply be the $modelValue because they don't have a hook into the ngModelController but we want to keep the api consistent).

Custom Templates

You have a lot of freedom when it comes to writing templates. You don't even need to use the model which means that you can have fields that are just part of the look and feel of your form. Formly also provides you with the following directives to help you in your templates:

  • formly-custom-validation
  • formly-dynamic-name (useful if you want to support pre 1.3, otherwise, just use name="{{::id}}")
  • formly-focus

Roadmap

Contributing

Please see the CONTRIBUTING Guidelines.

Thanks

A special thanks to Nimbly for creating/sponsoring Angular-Formly's development. Thanks to Kent C. Dodds for his continued support on the project.

FAQs

Package last updated on 07 Feb 2015

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