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NGX-FORM

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Model based typed reactive forms made easy.

Summary

How to install

First install the library in your project :

npm install --save @paddls/ngx-form

Recommended Angular versions

Angular NgxForm
18.0.0 and above 8.0.0 and above
17.0.0 and above 7.0.0 and above
16.0.0 and above 6.0.0 and above
15.0.0 and above 5.0.0 and above
14.0.0 and above 4.0.1 and above
13.0.0 and above 3.0.1 and above
12.0.0 and above 2.0.0 and above
11.0.0 and above 1.0.0 and above

After that, import NgxFormModule as follows :

import {ReactiveFormsModule} from '@angular/forms';
import {NgxFormModule} from '@paddls/ngx-form';

@NgModule({
  imports: [
    ReactiveFormsModule,
    NgxFormModule
  ]
})
export class AppModule {
}

Basic usage

Create a form

With ngx-form, the form creation is model driven. Therefore, to create a form, you need to create a model class which will represent the form.

A form model should look like this :

import {FormControl} from '@paddls/ngx-form';

export class AddressForm {

  @FormControl()
  public city: string;

  @FormControl({defaultValue: 3})
  public streetNumber: number;

  @FormControl({defaultValue: '10055', name: 'postalCode'})
  public zipCode: string;

  @FormControl('street')
  public route: string;

  public constructor(data: Partial<AddressForm> = {}) {
    Object.assign(this, data);
  }
}

Each class attribute with the @FormControl() decorator will be marked as a form control. Inside the @FormControl() annotation, you can add some context at your will. Two properties are available : defaultValue and name.

By specifying a defaultValue, the form control will be initialized with this value at the form creation.

With the name property, you can differentiate the name given to the field in your model and the name of the control in the created form.

You can define only one of the properties in the context, or both. If you just want to specify the name property, you can do it just by passing a string as the context like in the example above.

Build a form

Once you've created the model, you can build the form wherever you like through your entire Angular application using the @BuildForm() decorator.

import {Component} from '@angular/core';
import {BuildForm, NgxFormGroup} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {AddressForm} from './form/address.form';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html'
})
export class AppComponent {

  @BuildForm(() => AddressForm)
  public addressForm: NgxFormGroup<AddressForm>;

  public onSubmit(): void {
    console.log(this.addressForm.getValue());
  }
}

That's it ! You can now use your newly created form juste like any other reactive form. Furthermore, the form is strongly typed. To retrieve the strongly typed result, just call form.getValue() method.

FormGroup

import {FormControl, FormGroup} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {AddressForm} from './address.form';

export class UserForm {

  @FormControl({value: 'Brad'})
  public firstName: string;

  @FormControl({value: 'Pitt'})
  public lastName: string;

  @FormGroup(() => AddressForm)
  public personalAddress: AddressForm;

  @FormGroup({type: () => AddressForm, defaultValue: myAddressValue, name: 'companyAddress'})
  public workAddress: AddressForm;
}

To nest forms, use the @FormGroup() decorator. Do not forget to specify the type of your child form in the decorator context.

You can also specify defaultValue and name properties if necessary. If you don't need to specify them, you can specify the type in the context directly like in the example above.

FormArray

import {FormControl, FormArray} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {CompanyForm} from './company.form';

export class UserForm {

  @FormControl({defaultValue: 'Leonardo'})
  public firstName: string;

  @FormControl()
  public lastName: string;

  @FormArray({defaultValue: 'Default skill', defaultValues: ['Java', 'C++'], updateOn: 'blur', name: 'userSkills'})
  public skills: string[];

  @FormArray(() => CompanyForm)
  public companies: CompanyForm[];
}

To add a FormArray to your form model, just add an attribute with the @FormArray() decorator. Again, you can specify defaultValue and name properties if necessary. Like with the @FormGroup() decorator, you can specify a type if you wish to create an array of nested forms.

Additionally, you can add defaultValues or updateOn properties to the context.

Like with the @FormControl() or @FormGroup() decorators, shorthands for name and type properties are available. Just specify the properties directly in the context if they are the only property used.

Validator, AsyncValidator and UpdateOn

import {FormControl, FormGroup, UpdateOn, Validator, AsyncValidator} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {AddressForm} from './address.form';
import {Validators} from '@angular/forms';

@UpdateOn('change')
export class UserForm {

  @FormControl({defaultValue: 'Thomas'})
  @Validator(Validators.required)
  @UpdateOn('blur')
  public firstName: string;

  @AsyncValidator(myAsyncValidator)
  @FormControl('lastname')
  public lastName: string;

  @Validator([Validators.required, Validators.min(0)])
  public age: number;

  @FormGroup({type: () => AddressForm, defaultValue: structuredClone(defaultAddress)})
  @UpdateOn('submit')
  public personalAddress: AddressForm;
}

To add Validators, AsyncValidators or specify the updateOn property on any form, FormControl, FormGroup or FormArray, just add a @Validator, @AsyncValidator or @UpdateOn decorator on any form model attribute or on the form model class if you want to apply it to a form.

The @Validator or @AsyncValidator decorators take any ValidatorFn, AsyncValidatorFn or arrays of ValidatorFn and AsyncValidatorFn as parameters to apply them to the desired control or form. The @UpdateOn decorator takes 'change', 'blur' or 'submit' value as parameter to apply it to the desired control or form.

ValidatorFactory

You can use a ValidatorFactory to build a ValidatorFn using values from any provider (@Injectable()) with the following syntax :

class Form {

  @Validator([
    ValidatorFactory.of(((provider: MyProvider) => Validators.min(provider.length)), [MyProvider])
  ])
  @FormControl()
  public secondaryAddress: string;
}

You can mix standard ValidatorFn and ValidatorFactory inside the @Validator decorator.

AsyncValidatorFactory

You can also use a AsyncValidatorFactory, it has the same behaviour as ValidatorFactory.

class Form {

  @AsyncValidator([
    AsyncValidatorFactory.of(
      (service: MyService) => () => service.httpCall().pipe(map((result: string) => ({error: result}))),
      [MyService]
    )
  ])
  @FormControl()
  public secondaryAddress: string;
}

FormChild

import {Component} from '@angular/core';
import {BuildForm, FormChild, NgxFormArray, NgxFormGroup} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {UserForm} from '../form/user.form';
import {CompanyForm} from '../form/company.form';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./app.component.scss']
})
export class AppComponent {

  @BuildForm(() => UserForm)
  public userForm: NgxFormGroup<UserForm>;

  @FormChild({attribute: 'userForm', path: 'skills'})
  public skillForms: NgxFormArray<string>;

  @FormChild({attribute: 'userForm', path: 'companies'})
  public companyForms: NgxFormArray<CompanyForm>;
}

@FormChild attribute can be used to access a subform of a built parent form directly. To do that, add an attribute with the @FormChild decorator in the same class as your built parent form. Just specify the attribute name of the parent form with the attribute decorator parameter, the path of the form child you want to directly access, and you're done !

Form lifecycle

A NgxForm object exposes the following methods :

getValue()

Returns the current strongly typed value of the form.

import {Component} from '@angular/core';
import {BuildForm, NgxFormGroup} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {AddressForm} from './form/address.form';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html'
})
export class AppComponent {

  @BuildForm(() => AddressForm)
  public addressForm: NgxFormGroup<AddressForm>;

  public onSubmit(): void {
    console.log(this.addressForm.getValue());
  }
}

setValue()

Sets a new value on the form. The behaviour of this method is similar to classic reactive forms.

import {Component} from '@angular/core';
import {BuildForm, NgxFormGroup} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {AddressForm} from './form/address.form';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html'
})
export class AppComponent {

  @BuildForm(() => AddressForm)
  public addressForm: NgxFormGroup<AddressForm>;

  public constructor() {
    this.addressForm.setValue(new AddressForm({city: 'New York City'}))
  }
}

patchValue()

Patches a new value on the form. The behaviour of this method is similar to classic reactive forms.

import {Component} from '@angular/core';
import {BuildForm, NgxFormGroup} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {AddressForm} from './form/address.form';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html'
})
export class AppComponent {

  @BuildForm(() => AddressForm)
  public addressForm: NgxFormGroup<AddressForm>;

  public constructor() {
    this.addressForm.patchValue(new AddressForm({city: 'New York City'}))
  }
}

restore()

Restores the form value to the initial value. Each control initial value is defined with the defaultValue attribute available in the @FormControl(), @FormGroup() and @FormArray() decorators.

import {Component} from '@angular/core';
import {BuildForm, NgxFormGroup} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {AddressForm} from './form/address.form';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html'
})
export class AppComponent {

  @BuildForm(() => AddressForm)
  public addressForm: NgxFormGroup<AddressForm>;

  public onRestore(): void {
    this.addressForm.restore();
  }
}

empty()

Empties all values of the form. This calls reset() method on each form control and clear() method on all form arrays.

import {Component} from '@angular/core';
import {BuildForm, NgxFormGroup} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {AddressForm} from './form/address.form';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html'
})
export class AppComponent {

  @BuildForm(() => AddressForm)
  public addressForm: NgxFormGroup<AddressForm>;

  public onRestore(): void {
    this.addressForm.empty();
  }
}

cancel()

Cancels the last setValue() applied on the form.

import {Component} from '@angular/core';
import {BuildForm, NgxFormGroup} from '@paddls/ngx-form';
import {AddressForm} from './form/address.form';

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html'
})
export class AppComponent {

  @BuildForm(() => AddressForm)
  public addressForm: NgxFormGroup<AddressForm>;

  public onRestore(): void {
    this.addressForm.cancel();
  }
}

markAllAsDirty()

Sets all controls to DIRTY state.

markAllAsPending()

Sets all controls to PENDING state.

markAllAsPristine()

Sets all controls to PRISTINE state.

markAllAsUntouched()

Sets all controls to UNTOUCHED state.

add()

Adds a new element to a form array. Prefer this method over push() method available on classic reactive forms as you don't need to explicitly pass a new form control to add : by default, NgxForm will add a new instance of the type of the form array. You can set a default value to the new element and set a specific index.

DisableOn

The @DisableOn() decorator allows you to control when to enable/disable a control. The decorated control will be disabled when the Observable passed as an argument is truthy, and enabled otherwise.

If you want to use a context from providers, you can use a DisableOnFactory and inject your providers.

Options can also be passed as a second argument of the decorator.

class UserForm {

  @DisableOn(of(true))
  @FormControl()
  public surname: string;

  @DisableOn(DisableOnFactory.of((provider: MyProvider) => provider.disableWithTimeout(), [MyProvider]))
  @FormControl()
  public disabledWithTimeoutAddress: string;

  @DisableOn(DisableOnFactory.of((provider: MyProvider) => provider.disableWithTimeout(), [MyProvider]), {emitEvent: false})
  @FormControl()
  public disabledWithTimeoutAddressWithoutEvents: string;
}

⚠️ Any instance (built with @BuildForm()) of a form using this feature must have unsubscribeOn parameter provided in the config as follows :

class ConsumerComponent {

  public readonly obs$: Observable<any> = EMPTY;

  @BuildForm(() => UserForm, {unsubscribeOn: 'obs$'})
  public form: NgxFormGroup<UserForm>;
}

OnValueChanges

The @OnValueChanges() decorator allows you to call a method when a form value is changed. Pass the control name(s) for which you wish to listen to changes. If you wish to listen to changes on the whole form, you can apply the decorator without any parameters.

class SumForm {

  @FormControl()
  public a: number;

  @FormControl()
  public b: number;

  @FormControl()
  public sum: number;

  @OnValueChanges(['a', 'b'])
  public computeSum(instance: NgxFormGroup<SumForm>): void {
    this.sum = this.a + this.b;
    instance.setValue(this, {emitEvent: false});
  }
}

⚠️ Any instance (built with @BuildForm()) of a form using this feature must have unsubscribeOn parameter provided in the config as follows :

class ConsumerComponent {

  public readonly obs$: Observable<any> = EMPTY;

  @BuildForm(() => UserForm, {unsubscribeOn: 'obs$'})
  public form: NgxFormGroup<UserForm>;
}