Say hello to the best React form library you have ever used! Informed is an extensive, simple, and efficient solution for creating basic to complex forms in React. Out of the box you get the ability to grab and manipulate values, validate fields, create custom inputs, multi-step forms, array fields, and much much more!
Oh and YES WE USE HOOKS!
npm install --save informed
See for yourself.
By default it comes with native dom inputs that are controlled by informed.
import { Form, Input, Select, Checkbox, Relevant, Debug } from 'informed';
const onSubmit = ({ values }) => console.log(values);
const ExampleForm = () => (
<Form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
<Input name="name" label="Name" placeholder="Elon" />
<Input name="age" type="number" label="Age" required="Age Required" />
<Input name="phone" label="Phone" formatter="+1 (###)-###-####" />
<Select name="car" label="Car" initialValue="ms">
<option value="ms">Model S</option>
<option value="m3">Model 3</option>
<option value="mx">Model X</option>
<option value="my">Model Y</option>
</Select>
<Checkbox name="married" label="Married?" />
<Relevant when={({ formState }) => formState.values.married}>
<Input name="spouse" label="Spouse" />
</Relevant>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
<Debug />
</Form>
);
informed
was designed to support many important features
- Arrays: ability to render dynamic arrays of fields
[ 'a', 'b' ]
or[ { name: 'Joe', age: 29 }, { name: 'Hope', age: 24 }]
- Relevance: ability to render render fields conditionally depending on the state of other parts of the form
- JSPAN: ability to easily and intuitively manipulate form state
- Formatting: ability to perform display formatting, where the format shown to user can differ from the state of the values stored
- Validation: ability to perform both synchronous and asynchronous validation in a controlled manner
- Api: ability to manipulate the form state both inside and outside the context of the form
- State: ability to access field and form data
- Multistep: ability to create dynamic multistep forms
- Scope: ability to scope ( group ) fields
- Schema: ability to render forms based on pure JSON schema
- Dynaic: ability to hide and show fields ( render and unrender ) and either cleanup or maintain state of unmounted fields
- Debugging: ability to easily debug users state as well as internals of the library
- Nesting: ability to have highly nested value strucutre
state.values.friends[1].brother.parents.cars[0].model
But what if you dont want the out of the box stuff??
No problem, see example below!
import { useForm, useField, Relevant, FormState } from 'informed';
// Step 1. Build your form component ---------------------
const Form = ({ children, ...rest }) => {
const { formController, render, userProps } = useForm(rest);
return render(
<form noValidate {...userProps} onSubmit={formController.submitForm}>
{children}
</form>
);
};
// Step 2. Build your input components --------------------
const Input = props => {
const { render, informed, userProps, ref } = useField({
type: 'text',
...props
});
const { label, id, ...rest } = userProps;
return render(
<>
<label htmlFor={id}>{label}</label>
<input id={id} ref={ref} {...informed} {...rest} />
</>
);
};
const Checkbox = props => {
const { render, informed, userProps, ref } = useField({
type: 'checkbox',
...props
});
const { label, id, ...rest } = userProps;
return render(
<>
<label htmlFor={id}>{label}</label>
<input id={id} ref={ref} {...informed} {...rest} />
</>
);
};
const ErrorInput = props => {
const { render, informed, userProps, fieldState, ref } = useField({
type: 'text',
...props
});
const { label, id, ...rest } = userProps;
const { showError } = fieldState;
const style = showError ? { border: 'solid 1px red' } : null;
return render(
<>
<label htmlFor={id}>{label}</label>
<input id={id} ref={ref} {...informed} {...rest} style={style} />
{showError && <small style={{ color: 'red' }}>{fieldState.error}</small>}
</>
);
};
const Select = props => {
const { render, informed, userProps, ref } = useField({
type: 'select',
...props
});
const { label, id, children, ...rest } = userProps;
return render(
<>
<label htmlFor={id}>{label}</label>
<select id={id} ref={ref} {...informed} {...rest}>
{children}
</select>
</>
);
};
// Step 3. Build your forms! ---------------------------
const onSubmit = ({ values }) => console.log(values);
const ExampleForm = () => (
<Form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
<Input name="name" label="Name" placeholder="Elon" />
<ErrorInput name="age" type="number" label="Age" required="Age Required" />
<Input name="phone" label="Phone" formatter="+1 (###)-###-####" />
<Select name="car" label="Car" initialValue="ms">
<option value="ms">Model S</option>
<option value="m3">Model 3</option>
<option value="mx">Model X</option>
<option value="my">Model Y</option>
</Select>
<Checkbox name="married" label="Married?" />
<Relevant when={({ formState }) => formState.values.married}>
<Input name="spouse" label="Spouse" />
</Relevant>
<button type="submit">Submit</button>
<Debug />
</Form>
);
Informed took the following into consideration when being built:
-
Performance:
informed
was designed to be able to handle very complex forms at scale- Ability to render a form with thousands of fields on screen
- Ability to bulk update thousands of fields at a time
-
Readability
informed
was designed to be able to write complex forms with very litle intuitive code- Reads naturlly like with pure JSX:
<Form onSubmit={onSubmit}>
<Input name="name" label="Name" placeholder="Elon" />
<Input name="age" type="number" label="Age" required="Age Required" />
<Input name="phone" label="Phone" formatter="+1 (###)-###-####" />
<Checkbox name="married" label="Married?" />
<Relevant when={({ formState }) => formState.values.married}>
<Input name="spouse" label="Spouse" />
</Relevant>
<Debug />
</Form>
-
ZERO Dependency:
informed
was designed to rely on no other library- exception of a peer dependency react... for now ;)
-
JSON Schema:
informed
was designed to support rendering forms based on pure JSON- this is especially useful when form definitions are stored on the backend
-
Feature List:
informed
was designed to support many important features- Arrays: ability to render dynamic arrays of fields
[ 'a', 'b' ]
or[ { name: 'Joe', age: 29 }, { name: 'Hope', age: 24 }]
- Relevance: ability to render render fields conditionally depending on the state of other parts of the form
- JSPAN: ability to easily and intuitively manipulate form state
- Formatting: ability to perform display formatting, where the format shown to user can differ from the state of the values stored
- Validation: ability to perform both synchronous and asynchronous validation in a controlled manner
- Api: ability to manipulate the form state both inside and outside the context of the form
- State: ability to access field and form data
- Multistep: ability to create dynamic multistep forms
- Scope: ability to scope ( group ) fields
- Schema: ability to render forms based on pure JSON schema
- Dynaic: ability to hide and show fields ( render and unrender ) and either cleanup or maintain state of unmounted fields
- Debugging: ability to easily debug users state as well as internals of the library
- Nesting: ability to have highly nested value strucutre
state.values.friends[1].brother.parents.cars[0].model
- Arrays: ability to render dynamic arrays of fields
- JSPAN: ( Java Script Path Access Notation ) much like how you access and write to objects and arrays in javascript you can use the string representation to address a place in an object.
const path = 'state.values.friends[1].brother.name';
This project cotains three important directories, src
, vitedocs
, and __tests__
Note: some things were left out as they are not super important or are going to be depricated or removed in future.
project_root
β
βββ index.d.ts # all of informeds types live here
β
βββ src # all of informeds source code lives here ( except types index.d.ts )
β βββ components # React Components
β βββ hooks # Hooks
β βββ Context.js # Internal Contexts used in this library
β βββ debug.js # Basically the https://github.com/visionmedia/debug library but shrunk down
β βββ fieldMap.js # Default field adapter, used when working with schema forms
β βββ index.js # all external exports ( everything exposed to users )
β βββ ObjectMap.js # internal data structure for manipulating the form state objects
β βββ FormController.js # The brains behind the library, this controls basically everything :)
β βββ utils.js # Any utilities used throughout this project
β
βββ vitedocs # All the informed docs build via vite ( instead of storybook which was old way )
β βββ App.jsx # basic react app with react-router
β βββ Header # top nav of the docs
β βββ hooks # helper hooks for docs
β βββ Nav # side nav of the docs
β βββ Pages # main level pages of the app
β β βββApiReference # Self explanitory :)
β β βββExamples # Examples of all sorts of usecases
β β βββGettingStarted # Also Self explanitory :)
β β βββPlayground.jsx # Uses Sandpack to allow users to test any of the examples
β β
β βββ SideBySide.jsx # helper component for showing code example and output side by side
β βββ index.css # documentation styles
β βββ prism.css # styles for code blocks
β βββ ... # other stuff
β
βββ __tests__ # extensive unit testing
βββ components # tests for informed components
βββ hooks # tests for informed hooks
βββ ObjectMap.test # tests for the internal data structure
βββ Schema.test # tests for usage of JSON schema rendered forms
βββ utils.test # tests for interanal library utilites
FormController is the brains of informed, it holds the state
object and is responsible for:
- Managing the form state
- Tracking all form fields via registration/deregistration
- Managing events. FormController impliments its own event hanlder ( a few lines of code at bottom of file )
ObjectMap is the internal data structre that is responsible for managing the internal state object. Reads and writes all go through this data structure. Example:
// State object
const state = { values: {} };
// Set the states values first friends brothers age to 30
ObjectMap.set(state.values, 'friends[0].brothers.age', 30);
useField is the first class citizen of informed, its responsible for registering a field by name to the FormController.
Thouh there is not explicitly a component called Context
here the concept is KEY to understanding informed. Context alows us to register fields in a highly nested structure and allows us to do wild things such as scoping.
Below depicts the core to how this library works. Form controller is the master of all form elements and everyone else just subscribes to events that it triggers. The events can be caused by function calls from elsewhere. In the example below we depict what happens when a user types in an "H" in the name field
<Form>
<Input name="name" /> {/* --> useField("name") --> useFieldState("name") */}
<Debug /> {/* --> useFormState() */}
</Form>
+----------------+
| FormController | < ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ
| state {} | β
+-------+--------+ β
β β
β event("field", "name") β
v β
+-------------------+ β
| Event System | ββββββββββββββββ β
+--------+----+-----+ β β
β β β
β event("field", "name") β event("field", "name") β setValue("H")
β β β
v v β
+-------------------+ +------------------------+ β
| useFormState() | | useFieldState("name") | β
+-------------------+ +------------------------+ β
^ ^ β
β uses β uses β
β β β
+-------------------+ +------------------------+ β
| <Debug /> | | useField("name") | βββββββββ
+-------------------+ +------------------------+
^
β uses
β
+------------------------+
| <Input name="name" /> |
+------------------------+
I know, I know the types kinda suck. I personally dont use typescript so I have had to rely on other TS wizard devs to help maintain the types. When trying to type very complex objects such as FormState
especially parts like FormState.values
which can literally be an object that conatins anything there are lots of opinions on how to properly type it. Im activly seeking help here.
As stated earlier, docs now live in the vitedocs directory. Its called vitedocs
because I migrated them from storybook to now use a custom singe page react app built with vite
... pernounced "veet" by the way :)
Most of the docs contain examples where each example has a directory.
For example, if you look at the vitedocs/Pages/GettingStarted/CarColors
you will find the CarColors.jsx
file.
This file contains the page that gets shown ( whatever info you want to show on that page ) and then the example itself.
Because we use vite, we can take advantage of the fact that vite can import both a react component normally, and also the raw text from that file! Therefore creating examples is as simple as this!
Note how we make use of the SideBySide
component to render our code and example
import Example from './Example';
import exampleCode from './Example.jsx?raw';
//... other stuff
<SideBySide
leftHeader={<h3>Example: </h3>}
rightHeader={<h3>Code:</h3>}
left={<Example />}
right={<Code links input1={exampleCode} />}
/>;
- re-write the internal implimentation of how schemas are rendered, that code is not my favorite
- re-write the way multistep forms work. Currently they step through each step when navigating to a step only initializing the values for that step when its rendered
- allow an evaluate function to be passed into a form field ( i.e useField ). Currently this is not possible because evaluate re computes props to be passed to the component using useField but it would be nice to not have to call the
useConditional
hook. - move the rest of the schema docs over to the new docs ( I simply have not had the time to do this )
- Types ... I know, I know the types kinda suck. I personally dont use typescript so I have had to rely on other TS wizard devs to help maintain the types.