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mindplay/kissform

Model-driven form rendering and input validation.

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Model-driven means it's driven by models - that means, step one is building a model that describes details of the rendered inputs on the form, and how the input gets validated.

Model-driven in this library does not mean "baked into your domain model", it means building a dedicated model describing aspects of form input/output.

Concepts

The library consists of the following types, with the following responsibilities:

  • Field classes describe the possible input elements on a form - what they are, what they look like, and how they behave; not their state.

  • InputModel contains the state of the form - the values in the input elements and any error-messages. This is a thin wrapper around raw $_GET or $_POST data, combined with error state - it can be serialized, which means you can safely store it in a session variable.

  • InputRenderer renders HTML elements (basic inputs, labels, etc.) and/or delegates more complex rendering to Field instances - it provides fields with an InputModel instance (form values and errors) at the time of rendering.

  • InputValidation manages the validation process by running validators against fields.

  • ValidatorInterface defines the interface of validator types, which implement validation logic for e.g. e-mail addresses, numbers, date/time, etc.

Most Field types are capable of producing some built-in validators - these can be created and checked by calling InputValidation::check(). For example, setting the $min_length property of a TextField will cause it to create a CheckMinLength validator.

This design is based on the idea that there are no overlapping concerns between form rendering and input validation - one is about output, the other is about input.

Assuming you use PRG, when the form is rendered initially, there is no user input, thus nothing to validate; if the form fails validation, the validation occurs during a POST request, and the actual form rendering occurs during a separate GET request. In other words, form rendering and validation never actually occur during the same request.

Usage

A basic form model might look like this:

class UserForm
{
    /** @var TextField */
    public $first_name;

    /** @var TextField */
    public $last_name;

    public function __construct()
    {
        $this->first_name = new TextField('first_name');
        $this->first_name->setLabel('First Name');
        $this->first_name->setRequired();

        $this->last_name = new TextField('last_name');
        $this->last_name->setLabel('Last Name');
        $this->last_name->setRequired();
    }
}

Use the model to render form inputs:

$form = new InputRenderer(@$_POST['user'], 'user');

$t = new UserForm();

?>
<form method="post">
    <?= $form->labelFor($t->first_name) . $form->render($t->first_name) . '<br/>' ?>
    <?= $form->labelFor($t->last_name) . $form->render($t->last_name) . '<br/>' ?>
    <input class="btn btn-lg btn-primary" type="submit" value="Save" />
</form>

Reuse the form model to validate user input:

$model = InputModel::create($_POST['user']);

$validator = new InputValidation($model);

$validator->check([$t->first_name, $t->last_name]);

if ($model->isValid()) {
    // no errors!
} else {
    var_dump($model->errors); // returns e.g. array("first_name" => "First Name is required")
}

Note that only one error is recorded per field - the first one encountered.

This demonstrates the most basic pattern - please see the demo for a working example of the post/redirect/get cycle and CSRF protection.

Other Features

This library has other expected and useful features, including:

  • Comes preconfigured with Bootstrap class-names as defaults, because, why not.

  • Adds class="has-error" to inputs that have an error message.

  • Adds class="is-required" to inputs that are required.

  • Creates name and id attributes, according to really simple rules, e.g. prefix/suffix, no name mangling or complicated conventions to learn.

  • Field titles get reused, e.g. between <label> tags and error messages, but you can also customize displayed names in error messages, if needed.

  • Default error messages can be localized/customized.

It deliberately does not implement any of the following:

  • Trivial elements: things like <form>, <fieldset> and <legend> - you don't need code to help you create these simple tags, just type them out; your templates will be easier to read and maintain.

  • Form layout: there are too many possible variations, and it's just HTML, which is really easy to do in the first place - it's not worthwhile.

  • A plugin architecture: you don't need one - just use everyday OO patterns to solve problems like a thrifty programmer. Extend the renderer and validator as needed for your business/project/module/scenario/model, etc.

This library is a tool, not a silver bullet - it does as little as possible, avoids inventing complex concepts that can describe every detail, and instead deals primarily with the repetitive/error-prone stuff, and gets out of your way when you need it to.

There is very little to learn, and nothing needs to fit into a "box" - there is little "architecture" here, no "plugins" or "extensions", mostly just simple OOP.

You can/should extend the form renderer with your application-specific input types, and more importantly, extend that into model/case-specific renderers - it's just one class, so apply your OOP skills for fun and profit!

Why input validation, as opposed to (domain) model validation?

  • Because domain validation is usually specific to a scenario - you might as well do it with simple if-statements in a controller or service, and then manually add errors to the validator.

  • Because input validation is simpler - it's just one class, and you can/should extend the class with case-specific validations, since you're often going to have validations that pertain to only one scenario/model/case. Bulding reusable domain validation rules as components would be a lot more complicated - many of these would be applicable to only on scenario/case and would never actually get reused, so they don't even benefit from this complexity.

  • There are simple scenarios in which a domain model isn't even useful, such as contact or comment forms, etc.

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