29 KiB
SimpleForm - Rails forms made easy.
SimpleForm aims to be as flexible as possible while helping you with powerful components to create your forms. The basic goal of SimpleForm is to not touch your way of defining the layout, letting you find the better design for your eyes. Most of the DSL was inherited from Formtastic, which we are thankful for and should make you feel right at home.
INFO: This README is also available in a friendly navigable format and refers to SimpleForm 2.0. If you are using SimpleForm in the versions 1.x, you should check this branch:
https://github.com/plataformatec/simple_form/tree/v1.5
Installation
Add it to your Gemfile:
gem 'simple_form'
Run the following command to install it:
bundle install
Run the generator:
rails generate simple_form:install
Also, if you want to use the country select, you will need the country_select gem, add it to your Gemfile:
gem 'country_select'
Twitter Bootstrap
SimpleForm 2.0 can be easily integrated to the Twitter Bootstrap.
To do that you have to use the bootstrap
option in the install generator, like this:
rails generate simple_form:install --bootstrap
You have to be sure that you added a copy of the Twitter Bootstrap assets on your application.
For more information see the generator output, our example application code and the live example app.
NOTE: SimpleForm integration requires Twitter Bootstrap version 2.0 or higher.
Usage
SimpleForm was designed to be customized as you need to. Basically it's a stack of components that are invoked to create a complete html input for you, which by default contains label, hints, errors and the input itself. It does not aim to create a lot of different logic from the default Rails form helpers, as they do a great work by themselves. Instead, SimpleForm acts as a DSL and just maps your input type (retrieved from the column definition in the database) to an specific helper method.
To start using SimpleForm you just have to use the helper it provides:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :username %>
<%= f.input :password %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
This will generate an entire form with labels for user name and password as well, and render errors by default when you render the form with invalid data (after submitting for example).
You can overwrite the default label by passing it to the input method. You can also add a hint or even a placeholder. For boolean inputs, you can add an inline label as well:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :username, :label => 'Your username please' %>
<%= f.input :password, :hint => 'No special characters.' %>
<%= f.input :email, :placeholder => 'user@domain.com' %>
<%= f.input :remember_me, :inline_label => 'Yes, remember me' %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
In some cases you may want to disable labels, hints or error. Or you may want to configure the html of any of them:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :username, :label_html => { :class => 'my_class' } %>
<%= f.input :password, :hint => false, :error_html => { :id => 'password_error'} %>
<%= f.input :password_confirmation, :label => false %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
It is also possible to pass any html attribute straight to the input, by using the :input_html
option, for instance:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :username, :input_html => { :class => 'special' } %>
<%= f.input :password, :input_html => { :maxlength => 20 } %>
<%= f.input :remember_me, :input_html => { :value => '1' } %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
If you want to pass the same options to all inputs in the form (for example, a default class),
you can use the :defaults
option in simple_form_for
. Specific options in input
call will
overwrite the defaults:
<%= simple_form_for @user, :defaults => { :input_html => { :class => 'default_class' } } do |f| %>
<%= f.input :username, :input_html => { :class => 'special' } %>
<%= f.input :password, :input_html => { :maxlength => 20 } %>
<%= f.input :remember_me, :input_html => { :value => '1' } %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
Since SimpleForm generates a wrapper div around your label and input by default, you can pass
any html attribute to that wrapper as well using the :wrapper_html
option, like so:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :username, :wrapper_html => { :class => 'username' } %>
<%= f.input :password, :wrapper_html => { :id => 'password' } %>
<%= f.input :remember_me, :wrapper_html => { :class => 'options' } %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
Required fields are marked with an * prepended to their labels.
By default all inputs are required. When the form object has presence
validations attached to its fields, SimpleForm tells required and optional fields apart. For performance reasons, this detection is skipped on validations that make use of conditional options, such as :if
and :unless
.
And of course, the required
property of any input can be overwritten as needed:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :name, :required => false %>
<%= f.input :username %>
<%= f.input :password %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
SimpleForm also lets you overwrite the default input type it creates:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :username %>
<%= f.input :password %>
<%= f.input :description, :as => :text %>
<%= f.input :accepts, :as => :radio_buttons %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
So instead of a checkbox for the accepts attribute, you'll have a pair of radio buttons with yes/no
labels and a text area instead of a text field for the description. You can also render boolean
attributes using :as => :select
to show a dropdown.
It is also possible to give the :disabled
option to SimpleForm, and it'll automatically mark
the wrapper as disabled with a css class, so you can style labels, hints and other components inside
the wrapper as well:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :username, :disabled => true, :hint => 'You cannot change your username.' %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
SimpleForm accepts same options as their corresponding input type helper in Rails:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :date_of_birth, :as => :date, :start_year => Date.today.year - 90,
:end_year => Date.today.year - 12, :discard_day => true,
:order => [:month, :year] %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
SimpleForm also allows you to use label, hint, input_field, error and full_error helpers (please take a look at the rdocs for each method for more info):
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.label :username %>
<%= f.input_field :username %>
<%= f.hint 'No special characters, please!' %>
<%= f.error :username, :id => 'user_name_error' %>
<%= f.full_error :token %>
<%= f.submit 'Save' %>
<% end %>
Any extra option passed to these methods will be rendered as html option.
Collections
And what if you want to create a select containing the age from 18 to 60 in your form? You can do it
overriding the :collection
option:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :user %>
<%= f.input :age, :collection => 18..60 %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
Collections can be arrays or ranges, and when a :collection
is given the :select
input will be
rendered by default, so we don't need to pass the :as => :select
option. Other types of collection
are :radio_buttons
and :check_boxes
. Those are added by SimpleForm to Rails set of form
helpers (read Extra Helpers session below for more information).
Collection inputs accept two other options beside collections:
-
label_method => the label method to be applied to the collection to retrieve the label (use this instead of the
text_method
option incollection_select
) -
value_method => the value method to be applied to the collection to retrieve the value
Those methods are useful to manipulate the given collection. Both of these options also accept lambda/procs in case you want to calculate the value or label in a special way eg. custom translation. All other options given are sent straight to the underlying helper. For example, you can give prompt as:
f.input :age, :collection => 18..60, :prompt => "Select your age"
It is also possible to create grouped collection selects, that will use the html optgroup tags, like this:
f.input :country_id, :collection => @continents, :as => :grouped_select, :group_method => :countries
Grouped collection inputs accept the same :label_method
and :value_method
options, which will be
used to retrieve label/value attributes for the option
tags. Besides that, you can give:
-
group_method => the method to be called on the given collection to generate the options for each group (required)
-
group_label_method => the label method to be applied on the given collection to retrieve the label for the optgroup (SimpleForm will attempt to guess the best one the same way it does with
:label_method
)
Priority
SimpleForm also supports :time_zone
and :country
. When using such helpers, you can give
:priority
as option to select which time zones and/or countries should be given higher priority:
f.input :residence_country, :priority => [ "Brazil" ]
f.input :time_zone, :priority => /US/
Those values can also be configured with a default value to be used site use through the
SimpleForm.country_priority
and SimpleForm.time_zone_priority
helpers.
Note: While using country_select
if you want to restrict to only a subset of countries for a specific
drop down then you may use the :collection
option:
f.input :shipping_country, :priority => [ "Brazil" ], :collection => [ "Australia", "Brazil", "New Zealand"]
Associations
To deal with associations, SimpleForm can generate select inputs, a series of radios buttons or check boxes. Lets see how it works: imagine you have a user model that belongs to a company and has_and_belongs_to_many roles. The structure would be something like:
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :company
has_and_belongs_to_many :roles
end
class Company < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :users
end
class Role < ActiveRecord::Base
has_and_belongs_to_many :users
end
Now we have the user form:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :name %>
<%= f.association :company %>
<%= f.association :roles %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
Simple enough, right? This is going to render a :select
input for choosing the :company
, and another
:select
input with :multiple
option for the :roles
. You can, of course, change it to use radio
buttons and check boxes as well:
f.association :company, :as => :radio_buttons
f.association :roles, :as => :check_boxes
The association helper just invokes input
under the hood, so all options available to :select
,
:radio_buttons
and :check_boxes
are also available to association. Additionally, you can specify
the collection by hand, all together with the prompt:
f.association :company, :collection => Company.active.all(:order => 'name'), :prompt => "Choose a Company"
Buttons
All web forms need buttons, right? SimpleForm wraps them in the DSL, acting like a proxy:
<%= simple_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.input :name %>
<%= f.button :submit %>
<% end %>
The above will simply call submit. You choose to use it or not, it's just a question of taste.
Wrapping Rails Form Helpers
Say you wanted to use a rails form helper but still wrap it in SimpleForm goodness? You can, by calling input with a block like so:
<%= f.input :role do %>
<%= f.select :role, Role.all.map { |r| [r.name, r.id, { :class => r.company.id }] }, :include_blank => true %>
<% end %>
In the above example, we're taking advantage of Rails 3's select method that allows us to pass in a hash of additional attributes for each option.
Extra helpers
SimpleForm also comes with some extra helpers you can use inside rails default forms without relying
on simple_form_for
helper. They are listed below.
Simple Fields For
Wrapper to use SimpleForm inside a default rails form. It works in the same way that the field_for
Rails helper, but change the builder to use the SimpleForm::FormBuilder
.
form_for @user do |f|
f.simple_fields_for :posts do |posts_form|
# Here you have all simple_form methods available
posts_form.input :title
end
end
Collection Radio Buttons
Creates a collection of radio inputs with labels associated (same API as collection_select
):
form_for @user do |f|
f.collection_radio_buttons :options, [[true, 'Yes'] ,[false, 'No']], :first, :last
end
<input id="user_options_true" name="user[options]" type="radio" value="true" />
<label class="collection_radio_buttons" for="user_options_true">Yes</label>
<input id="user_options_false" name="user[options]" type="radio" value="false" />
<label class="collection_radio_buttons" for="user_options_false">No</label>
Collection Check Boxes
Creates a collection of check boxes with labels associated (same API as collection_select
):
form_for @user do |f|
f.collection_check_boxes :options, [[true, 'Yes'] ,[false, 'No']], :first, :last
end
<input name="user[options][]" type="hidden" value="" />
<input id="user_options_true" name="user[options][]" type="checkbox" value="true" />
<label class="collection_check_box" for="user_options_true">Yes</label>
<input name="user[options][]" type="hidden" value="" />
<input id="user_options_false" name="user[options][]" type="checkbox" value="false" />
<label class="collection_check_box" for="user_options_false">No</label>
To use this with associations in your model, you can do the following:
form_for @user do |f|
f.collection_check_boxes :role_ids, Role.all, :id, :name # using :roles here is not going to work.
end
Mappings/Inputs available
SimpleForm comes with a lot of default mappings:
Mapping Input Column Type
boolean check box boolean
string text field string
email email field string with name matching "email"
url url field string with name matching "url"
tel tel field string with name matching "phone"
password password field string with name matching "password"
search search -
text text area text
file file field string, responding to file methods
hidden hidden field -
integer number field integer
float number field float
decimal number field decimal
range range field -
datetime datetime select datetime/timestamp
date date select date
time time select time
select collection select belongs_to/has_many/has_and_belongs_to_many associations
radio_buttons collection radio buttons belongs_to
check_boxes collection check boxes has_many/has_and_belongs_to_many associations
country country select string with name matching "country"
time_zone time zone select string with name matching "time_zone"
Custom inputs
It is very easy to add custom inputs to SimpleForm. For instance, if you want to add a custom input that extends the string one, you just need to add this file:
# app/inputs/currency_input.rb
class CurrencyInput < SimpleForm::Inputs::Base
def input
"$ #{@builder.text_field(attribute_name, input_html_options)}".html_safe
end
end
And use it in your views:
f.input :money, :as => :currency
You can also redefine existing SimpleForm inputs by creating a new class with the same name. For instance, if you want to wrap date/time/datetime in a div, you can do:
# app/inputs/date_time_input.rb
class DateTimeInput < SimpleForm::Inputs::DateTimeInput
def input
template.content_tag(:div, super)
end
end
Or if you want to add a class to all the select fields you can do:
# app/inputs/collection_select_input.rb
class CollectionSelectInput < SimpleForm::Inputs::CollectionSelectInput
def input_html_classes
super.push('chosen')
end
end
Custom form builder
You can create a custom form builder that uses SimpleForm.
Create a helper method that calls simple_form_for
with a custom builder:
def custom_form_for(object, *args, &block)
options = args.extract_options!
simple_form_for(object, *(args << options.merge(:builder => CustomFormBuilder)), &block)
end
Create a form builder class that inherits from SimpleForm::FormBuilder
.
class CustomFormBuilder < SimpleForm::FormBuilder
def input(attribute_name, options = {}, &block)
options[:input_html].merge! :class => 'custom'
super
end
end
I18n
SimpleForm uses all power of I18n API to lookup labels, hints and placeholders. To customize your forms you can create a locale file like this:
en:
simple_form:
labels:
user:
username: 'User name'
password: 'Password'
hints:
user:
username: 'User name to sign in.'
password: 'No special characters, please.'
placeholders:
user:
username: 'Your username'
password: '****'
And your forms will use this information to render the components for you.
SimpleForm also lets you be more specific, separating lookups through actions for labels, hints and placeholders. Let's say you want a different label for new and edit actions, the locale file would be something like:
en:
simple_form:
labels:
user:
username: 'User name'
password: 'Password'
edit:
username: 'Change user name'
password: 'Change password'
This way SimpleForm will figure out the right translation for you, based on the action being rendered. And to be a little bit DRYer with your locale file, you can specify defaults for all models under the 'defaults' key:
en:
simple_form:
labels:
defaults:
username: 'User name'
password: 'Password'
new:
username: 'Choose a user name'
hints:
defaults:
username: 'User name to sign in.'
password: 'No special characters, please.'
placeholders:
defaults:
username: 'Your username'
password: '****'
SimpleForm will always look for a default attribute translation under the "defaults" key if no specific is found inside the model key. Note that this syntax is different from 1.x. To migrate to the new syntax, just move "labels.#{attribute}" to "labels.defaults.#{attribute}".
In addition, SimpleForm will fallback to default human_attribute_name from Rails when no other translation is found for labels. Finally, you can also overwrite any label, hint or placeholder inside your view, just by passing the option manually. This way the I18n lookup will be skipped.
SimpleForm also has support for translating options in collection helpers. For instance, given a
User with a :gender
attribute, you might want to create a select box showing translated labels
that would post either male
or female
as value. With SimpleForm you could create an input
like this:
f.input :gender, :collection => [:male, :female]
And SimpleForm will try a lookup like this in your locale file, to find the right labels to show:
en:
simple_form:
options:
user:
gender:
male: 'Male'
female: "Female'
You can also use the defaults
key as you would do with labels, hints and placeholders. It is
important to notice that SimpleForm will only do the lookup for options if you give a collection
composed of symbols only. This is to avoid constant lookups to I18n.
It's also possible to translate buttons, using Rails' built-in I18n support:
en:
helpers:
submit:
user:
create: "Add %{model}"
update: "Save Changes"
There are other options that can be configured through I18n API, such as required text and boolean.
Be sure to check our locale file or the one copied to your application after you run
rails generate simple_form:install
.
It should be noted that translations for labels, hints and placeholders for a namespaced model, e.g.
Admin::User
, should be placed under admin_user
, not under admin/user
. This is different from
how translations for namespaced model and attribute names are defined:
en:
activerecord:
models:
admin/user: User
attributes:
admin/user:
name: Name
They should be placed under admin/user
. Form labels, hints and placeholders for those attributes,
though, should be placed under admin_user
:
en:
simple_form:
labels:
admin_user:
name: Name
This difference exists because SimpleForm relies on object_name
provided by Rails'
FormBuilder to determine the translation path for a given object instead of i18n_key
from the
object itself. Thus, similarly, if a form for an Admin::User
object is defined by calling
simple_form_for @admin_user, :as => :some_user
, SimpleForm will look for translations
under some_user
instead of admin_user
.
Configuration
SimpleForm has several configuration options. You can read and change them in the initializer created by SimpleForm, so if you haven't executed the command below yet, please do:
rails generate simple_form:install
The wrappers API
With SimpleForm you can configure how your components will be rendered using the wrappers API. The syntax looks like this:
config.wrappers :tag => :div, :class => :input,
:error_class => :field_with_errors do |b|
# Form extensions
b.use :html5
b.optional :pattern
b.use :maxlength
b.use :placeholder
b.use :readonly
# Form components
b.use :label_input
b.use :hint, :wrap_with => { :tag => :span, :class => :hint }
b.use :error, :wrap_with => { :tag => :span, :class => :error }
end
The Form components will generate the form tags like labels, inputs, hints or errors contents. The available components are:
:label # The <label> tag alone
:input # The <input> tag alone
:label_input # The <label> and the <input> tags
:hint # The hint for the input
:error # The error for the input
The Form extensions are used to generate some attributes or perform some lookups on the model to add extra information to your components.
You can create new Form components using the wrappers API as in the following example:
config.wrappers do |b|
b.use :placeholder
b.use :label_input
b.wrapper :tag => :div, :class => 'separator' do |component|
component.use :hint, :wrap_with => { :tag => :span, :class => :hint }
component.use :error, :wrap_with => { :tag => :span, :class => :error }
end
end
this will wrap the hint and error components within a div
tag using the class 'separator'
.
If you want to customize the custom Form components on demand you can give it a name like this:
config.wrappers do |b|
b.use :placeholder
b.use :label_input
b.wrapper :my_wrapper, :tag => :div, :class => 'separator' do |component|
component.use :hint, :wrap_with => { :tag => :span, :class => :hint }
component.use :error, :wrap_with => { :tag => :span, :class => :error }
end
end
and now you can pass options to your input
calls to customize the :my_wrapper
Form component.
# Completely turns off the custom wrapper
f.input :name, :my_wrapper => false
# Configure the html
f.input :name, :my_wrapper_html => { :id => 'special_id' }
# Configure the tag
f.input :name, :my_wrapper_tag => :p
You can also define more than one wrapper and pick one to render in a specific form or input. To define another wrapper you have to give it a name, as the follow:
config.wrappers :small do |b|
b.use :placeholder
b.use :label_input
end
and use it in this way:
# Specifying to whole form
simple_form_for @user, :wrapper => :small do |f|
f.input :name
end
# Specifying to one input
simple_form_for @user do |f|
f.input :name, :wrapper => :small
end
SimpleForm also allows you to use optional elements. For instance, let's suppose you want to use
hints or placeholders, but you don't want them to be generated automatically. You can set their
default values to false
or use the optional
method. Is preferible to use the optional
syntax:
config.wrappers :placeholder => false do |b|
b.use :placeholder
b.use :label_input
b.wrapper :tag => :div, :class => 'separator' do |component|
component.optional :hint, :wrap_with => { :tag => :span, :class => :hint }
component.use :error, :wrap_with => { :tag => :span, :class => :error }
end
end
By setting it as optional
, a hint will only be generated when :hint => true
is explicitly used.
The same for placehold.
HTML 5 Notice
By default, SimpleForm will generate input field types and attributes that are supported in HTML5, but are considered invalid HTML for older document types such as HTML4 or XHTML1.0. The HTML5 extensions include the new field types such as email, number, search, url, tel, and the new attributes such as required, autofocus, maxlength, min, max, step.
Most browsers will not care, but some of the newer ones - in particular Chrome 10+ - use the required attribute to force a value into an input and will prevent form submission without it. Depending on the design of the application this may or may not be desired. In many cases it can break existing UI's.
It is possible to disable all HTML 5 extensions in SimpleForm with the following configuration:
SimpleForm.html5 = false # default is true
If you want to have all other HTML 5 features, such as the new field types, you can disable only the browser validation:
SimpleForm.browser_validations = false # default is true
This option adds a new novalidate
property to the form, instructing it to skip all HTML 5
validation. The inputs will still be generated with the required and other attributes, that might
help you to use some generic javascript validation.
You can also add novalidate
to a specific form by setting the option on the form itself:
<%= simple_form_for(resource, :html => {:novalidate => true}) do |form| %>
Please notice that any of the configurations above will disable the placeholder
component,
which is an HTML 5 feature. We believe most of the newest browsers are handling this attribute fine,
and if they aren't, any plugin you use would take of using the placeholder attribute to do it.
However, you can disable it if you want, by removing the placeholder component from the components
list in SimpleForm configuration file.
Information
Google Group
If you have any questions, comments, or concerns please use the Google Group instead of the GitHub Issues tracker:
http://groups.google.com/group/plataformatec-simpleform
RDocs
You can view the SimpleForm documentation in RDoc format here:
http://rubydoc.info/github/plataformatec/simple_form/master/frames
If you need to use SimpleForm with Rails 2.3, you can always run gem server
from the command line
after you install the gem to access the old documentation.
Bug reports
If you discover any bugs, feel free to create an issue on GitHub. Please add as much information as possible to help us fixing the possible bug. We also encourage you to help even more by forking and sending us a pull request.
https://github.com/plataformatec/simple_form/issues
Maintainers
- José Valim (https://github.com/josevalim)
- Carlos Antonio da Silva (https://github.com/carlosantoniodasilva)
- Rafael Mendonça França (https://github.com/rafaelfranca)
License
MIT License. Copyright 2012 Plataformatec. http://plataformatec.com.br