NAME
Data::MuForm::Manual::Rendering - Rendering documentation
VERSION
version 0.02
DESCRIPTION
Note: The rendering is still very much a work in process.
One of the main goals of this new rendering system is to make it easier to render forms in templates in ways that allow the classes and other html rendering pieces to be kept out of the Perl class definitions. You should be able to do it in Perl if you want, but it should be easy and possible to keep almost all of that in the templates.
The form has a 'renderer' object, with a number of defaults that you can customize. The default renderer is 'Data::MuForm::Renderer::Base'. The expectation is that most people who do much rendering will create a subclass of the renderer to implement their specific requirements. A renderer can be specified in the form:
package MyApp::Form::Test;
use Moo;
use Data::MuForm::Meta;
extends 'Data::MuForm';
sub build_renderer_class { 'MyApp::Form::Renderer' }
sub build_renderer_args {
{ default_wrapper_class => '..', default_cb_layout => '...' }
}
See Data::MuForm::Renderer::Base for the current defaults that can be specified.
There is a 'render_args' hashref for every field, which will contain attributes for the various parts of the field that need to be rendered.
# field render_args
render_args => {
wrapper => { },
layout_type => '..',
input_type => '...',
element_attr => { class => 'xxx', placeholder => 'Type here' },
label_attr => { },
error_attr => { },
wrapper_attr => { },
element_wrapper_attr => { },
},
There are 'shortcuts' to specify the various attribute hashrefs.
render_args - ra
element_attr - ea
label_attr - la
error_attr - era
wrapper_attr - wa
element_wrapper_attr - ewa
Examples:
ra => { ... }
'ra.ea.class' => ['myclass', 'mb10'],
has_field 'foo' => ( 'ra.wa.class' => 'ww34' );
Because render_args is a plain hashref, you don't have to add new attributes or flags in order to implement a custom renderer.
A few attributes are still defined in fields because they are structural or necessary to the code, like the field name, id, and value (and fif). Some field attributes are part of validation, like 'maxlength'.
Each field class will include particular render_args in a 'base_render_args' method. The field definition render_args will be merged with the base render_args.
Note that if you want to put as much of the HTML as possible in the templates, you shouldn't have to specify anything in the form's field definitions.
NAME
Data::MuForm::Manual::Rendering
FORM METHODS
render
For rendering the entire form automatically:
[% form.render %]
render_start
Render the opening <form> tag, including id, name, enctype.
[% form.render_start %]
render_end
For the completists out there... Just does '</form>', but might be useful to override if you have a wrapper for the whole form.
[% form.render_end %}
FIELD METHODS
render
[% form.field('foo').render({ element_attr = { class = 'xxx ppp' }, layout = 'bare'} }) %]
render_element
The hashref passed in is the 'element_attr' hashref.
[% form.field('foo').render_element({ class = 'ddd xxx' }) %]
Note that this method doesn't work with fields with multiple elements, like checkbox group, radio group, list, compound, and repeatable. For those fields you will need to loop through the options or the fields. It works for standard input, select, and checkbox fields.
render_label
The hashref passed in is the 'label_attr' hashref.
[% form.field('foo').render_label({ ... }) %]
render_errors
'error_attr' - not currently used in rendering code, but you could use if you implement your own 'render_errors'.
[% form.field('foo').render_errors({ ... }) %]
render_option
For the select field, including 'select', 'radiogroup' and 'checkboxgroup' rendering.
[% field = form.field('foo') %]
[% FOR option IN field.options %]
<div>
<label>[% option.label %]
[% field.render_option(option) %]
</label>
</div>
[% END %]
Rendering loops
all_sorted_fields
[% FOR field IN form.all_sorted_field %]
<div class="...">
[% field.render %]
</div>
[% END %]
1;
AUTHOR
Gerda Shank
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2017 by Gerda Shank.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.