barryvdh / laravel-form-bridge by barryvdh

This packages integrates Symfony Form Component in Laravel.
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Package Data
Maintainer Username: barryvdh
Maintainer Contact: barryvdh@gmail.com (Barry vd. Heuvel)
Package Create Date: 2015-04-20
Package Last Update: 2024-10-30
Home Page:
Language: PHP
License: MIT
Last Refreshed: 2024-12-29 15:07:15
Package Statistics
Total Downloads: 281,248
Monthly Downloads: 3,374
Daily Downloads: 11
Total Stars: 154
Total Watchers: 12
Total Forks: 29
Total Open Issues: 9

Laravel 5 Form Bridge

See http://symfony.com/doc/current/forms.html

Laravel integration:

  • Pre-set old input
  • Add validation errors
  • Translate field names

Install

  • composer require barryvdh/laravel-form-bridge
  • Add Barryvdh\Form\ServiceProvider::class, to you ServiceProviders.
  • (optional) Add 'FormFactory' => Barryvdh\Form\Facade\FormFactory::class, to your Facades.
  • (optional) Add 'FormRenderer' => Barryvdh\Form\Facade\FormRenderer::class, to your Facades.

Basic example

You can use the FormFactory to create a form. You can supply a Model as data, so it will fill the values.

You can use $form->handleRequest($request); to update the values in the user, or you can just use $request object or Input facade like usual. However, by default, the form is grouped under a form key, so you have to use $request->get('form') to get the form values. Or you can create a Named form, with an empty name.

If you need to set more options, use the createBuilder function instead of create, to be able to use setAction() etc. You need to call ->getForm() to get the actual form instance again.

use FormFactory;
use Illuminate\Http\Request;
use Symfony\Component\Form\FormFactoryInterface;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\FormType;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\TextType;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\EmailType;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\SubmitType;

Route::any('create', function()
{
    $user = App\User::first();
    
    $form = FormFactory::create(FormType::class, $user)
        ->add('name', TextType::class)
        ->add('email', EmailType::class, [
            'rules' => 'unique:users,email',
        ])
        ->add('save', SubmitType::class, ['label' => 'Save user']);

    $form->handleRequest();

    if ($form->isSubmitted() && $form->isValid()) {
        // Save the user with the new mapped data
        $user->save();
        
        return redirect('home')->withStatus('User saved!');
    }

    return view('user.create', compact('form'));
});

Use the following in your Blade templates:

@formStart($form)
@formWidget($form)
@formEnd($form)

Other directives are: @form, @formLabel, @formErrors, @formRest and @formRow

@form($form)
@formStart($form)

<h2>Name</h2>
@formLabel($form['name'], 'Your name')
@formWidget($form['name'], ['attr' => ['class' => 'name-input']])

<h2>Rest</h2>
@formRest($form)

@formEnd($form)

Or use the following in your Twig templates to render the view:

{{ formStart(form) }}
{{ formWidget(form) }}
{{ formEnd(form) }}

See http://symfony.com/doc/current/book/forms.html#form-rendering-template for more options.

Traits

To make it easier to use in a Controller, you can use 2 traits:

ValidatesForms: Adds a validation method, similar to the ValidatesRequests trait: $this->validateForm($form, $request, $rules)

CreatesForms: Create a Form or FormBuilder:

  • createForm($type, $data, $options) -> Form for a type (form or a Type class)
  • createNamed($name, $type, $data, $options) -> Form with a given name
  • createFormBuilder($data, $options) -> FormBuilder with an empty name
  • createNamedFormBuilder($name, $data, $options) -> FormBuilder with a given name
use Barryvdh\Form\ValidatesForms;
use Barryvdh\Form\CreatesForms;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\TextType;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\EmailType;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\SubmitType;

class UserController extends Controller{

    use ValidatesForms, CreatesForms;
    
    public function anyIndex(Request $request)
    {
        $user = User::first();

        $form = $this->createFormBuilder($user)
            ->add('name', TextType::class)
            ->add('email', EmailType::class)
            ->add('save', SubmitType::class, ['label' => 'Save user'])
            ->getForm();

        $form->handleRequest($request);

        if ($form->isSubmitted()) {
            $this->validateForm($form, $request, [
                'name' => 'required',
                'email' => 'required|email',
            ]);

            $user->save();
        }

        return view('user', ['form' => $form->createView()]);
    }
}

Creating a named form:

use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\FormType;

$form = $this->createNamed('user', FormType::class, $user) 
    ->add('name', TextType::class)
    ->add('email', EmailType::class)
    ->add('save', SubmitType::class, ['label' => 'Save user']);

See http://symfony.com/doc/current/book/forms.html for more information.

BelongsToMany relations

BelongsToMany behaves differently, because it isn't an actual attribute on your model. Instead, we can set the mapped option to false and sync it manually.

use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\ChoiceType;

$builder->add('users', ChoiceType::class, [
    'choices' => \App\User::pluck('name', 'id'),
    'multiple' => true,
    'mapped' => false,
    'expanded' => true, // true=checkboxes, false=multi select
]);
$form->handleRequest($request);
if ($form->isSubmitted()) {
    $this->validate($request, $rules);

    $item->save();
    $item->users()->sync($form->get('users')->getData());

    return redirect()->back();
}

See for more options the choice type documentation.

Note: The BelongsToManyType is deprecated in favor of the ChoiceType from Symfony.

Translation labels

If you want to translate your labels automatically, just pass the translation key as the label attribute. It will run throught Twig's trans filter.

->add('name', TextType::class, ['label' => 'fields.name'])

Uploading Files

You can use the file type in the FormBuilder, and use the magic getFile() and setFile() method on your Model or mark it as not mapped, so you can handle it yourself. See http://symfony.com/doc/current/cookbook/doctrine/file_uploads.html

Class User extends Model {

    /** @var UploadedFile  */
    private $file;

    public function getFile()
    {
        return $this->file;
    }

    public function setFile(UploadedFile $file = null)
    {
        $this->file = $file;
    }

    public function upload()
    {
        // the file property can be empty if the field is not required
        if (null === $this->getFile()) {
            return;
        }

        // use the original file name here but you should
        // sanitize it at least to avoid any security issues

        // move takes the target directory and then the
        // target filename to move to
        $this->getFile()->move(
            $this->getUploadRootDir(),
            $this->getFile()->getClientOriginalName()
        );

        // set the path property to the filename where you've saved the file
        $this->path = $this->getFile()->getClientOriginalName();

        // clean up the file property as you won't need it anymore
        $this->file = null;
    }
}

use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\TextType;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\FileType;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\SubmitType;

$user = User::first();

$form = $this->createFormBuilder($user)
    ->add('name', TextType::class)
    ->add('file', FileType::class)
    ->add('save', SubmitType::class, ['label' => 'Save user'])
    ->getForm();
    
$form->handleRequest($request);

if ($form->isValid()) {
    $user->upload();
    $user->save();
}

Extending

You can extend some of the arrays in the ServiceProvider, eg. to add Types, add this to the register() method in your own ServiceProvider:

$this->app->extend('form.types', function($types, $app){
    $types[] = new CustomType();
    return $types;
});