NAME
Form::Tiny - Input validator centered around Type::Tiny
SYNOPSIS
package MyForm;
use Form::Tiny;
use Types::Standard qw(Int);
form_field 'my_field' => (
required => 1,
);
form_field 'another_field' => (
type => Int,
default => sub { 0 },
);
DESCRIPTION
Form::Tiny is a customizable hashref validator with form building Domain-Specific Language (DSL).
DOCUMENTATION INDEX
Form::Tiny::Manual - Main reference
Form::Tiny::Manual::Cookbook - Common tasks performed with Form::Tiny
Form::Tiny::Manual::Performance - How to get the most speed out of the module
Form::Tiny::Manual::Compatibility - See backwards compatibility notice
Form::Tiny::Manual::Internals - How to mess with Form::Tiny internals
Form::Tiny::Form - Form class added interface specification
Form::Tiny::Error - Form error class specification
Form::Tiny::FieldDefinition - Field definition class specification
Form::Tiny::Hook - Hook class specification
Form::Tiny::Plugin - How to write your own plugin?
IMPORTING
When imported, Form::Tiny will turn a package into a Moo class that does the Form::Tiny::Form role. It will also install helper functions in your package that act as a domain-specific language (DSL) for building your form.
package MyForm;
# imports only basic helpers
use Form::Tiny;
# all features offered by base distribution
use Form::Tiny -filtered, -strict;
# external plugins
use Form::Tiny plugins => ['Diva'];
After use Form::Tiny
statement, your package gains all the Moo keywords, some Form::Tiny keywords (see "Available import flags") and all Form::Tiny::Form methods.
Available import flags
No matter which flag was used in import, using Form::Tiny
always installs these functions: form_field form_cleaner form_hook
-nomoo
This flag stops Form::Tiny from importing Moo into your namespace. Unless you use a different class system (like Moose) will have to declare your own constructor.
-filtered
This flag enables field filtering in your form.
Additional installed functions:
form_filter field_filter form_trim_strings
-strict
This flag makes your form check for input data strictness before the validation.
plugins => ['Plugin1', '+Full::Namespace::To::Plugin2']
Load plugins into Form::Tiny. Plugins may introduce additional keywords, mix in roles or add metaclass roles. See Form::Tiny::Plugin for details on how to implement a plugin.
Form domain-specific language
form_field
form_field $name => %arguments;
form_field $coderef;
form_field($object); # watch out for indirect method call!
This helper declares a new field for your form. Each style of calling this function should contain keys that meet the specification of Form::Tiny::FieldDefinition, or an object of this class.
In the first (hash) version, %arguments
need to be a plain hash (not a hashref) and should not include the name
in the hash, since it will be overriden by the first argument $name
. This form also sets the context for the form being built: see "Context" in Form::Tiny::Manual for details.
In the second (coderef) version, $coderef
gets passed the form instance as its only argument and should return a hash reference or a constructed object of Form::Tiny::FieldDefinition. Unlike the first call style, hashref must contain a name
. Note that this creates dynamic field, which will be resolved later, before each form validation. Generally, you should avoid using dynamic fields and only use them when there is something special that you are trying to achieve.
If you need a subclass of the default implementation, and you don't need a dynamic field, you can use the third style of the call, which takes a constructed object of Form::Tiny::FieldDefinition or its subclass.
form_message
form_message
$type1 => $message1,
$type2 => $message2;
Override form default error messages, possibly multiple at a time. Types can be any of Required
(when a mandatory field is missing), IsntStrict
(when form is strict and the check for it fails) and InvalidFormat
(when passed input format is not a hash reference) - currently only those types have their own dedicated error message.
form_hook
form_hook $stage => $coderef;
This creates a new hook for $stage
. Each stage may have multiple hooks and each will pass different arguments to the $coderef
. Refer to "Hooks" in Form::Tiny::Manual for details.
form_cleaner
form_cleaner $coderef;
A shortcut for form_hook cleanup => $coderef;
.
field_validator
# uses current context
field_validator $message => $coderef;
Adds an additional custom validator, ran after the type of the field is validated. $message
should be something that can present itself as a string. If for a given input parameter $coderef
returns false, that message will be added to form errors for that field. See "Additional validators" in Form::Tiny::Manual for details.
See "Context" in Form::Tiny::Manual for details on context.
form_filter
form_filter $type, $coderef;
Filters the input value before the validation. $type
should be a Type::Tiny (or compatible) type check. For each input field that passes that check, $coderef
will be ran.
See "Filters" in Form::Tiny::Manual for details on filters.
field_filter
# uses current context
field_filter $type, $coderef;
Same as form_filter
, but is narrowed down to a single form field.
See "Context" in Form::Tiny::Manual for details on context.
form_trim_strings
form_trim_strings;
This helper takes no arguments, but causes your form to filter string values by calling Form::Tiny::Utils::trim on them.
TODO
Document and test meta classes
More tests for form inheritance
More examples
AUTHOR
Bartosz Jarzyna <bbrtj.pro@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2020 - 2023 by Bartosz Jarzyna
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.