Format your application forms with Bootstrap 4 markup.
Add phoenix_bootstrap_form
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[{:phoenix_bootstrap_form, "~> 0.1.0"}]
end
You may also alias this module in web.ex
so it's shorter to type in templates.
alias PhoenixBootstrapForm, as: PBF
In order to change markup of form elements to bootstrap-style ones all you need is
to prefix regular methods you aleady have with PhoenixBootstrapForm
, or PBF
if you created an alias. For example:
<%= form_for @changeset, "/", fn f -> %>
<%= PBF.text_input f, :value %>
<%= PBF.submit f %>
<% end %>
Becomes bootstrap-styled:
<form accept-charset="UTF-8" action="/" method="post">
<div class="form-group row">
<label class="col-form-label text-sm-right col-sm-2" for="record_value">
Value
</label>
<div class="col-sm-10">
<input class="form-control" id="record_value" name="record[value]" type="text">
</div>
</div>
<div class="form-group row">
<div class="col-sm-10 ml-auto">
<button class="btn" type="submit">Submit</button>
</div>
</div>
</form>
This library generates horizonal form layout that collapses down on small screens.
You can always fall-back to default Phoenix.HTML.Form methods if bootstrapped ones are not good enough.
Currently this module supports following methods:
- text_input
- file_input
- email_input
- password_input
- textarea
- telephone_input
- select
- checkbox
- checkboxes
- radio_buttons
- submit
- static
For quick reference you can look at this template.
You can mix phx.server
inside demo folder to see this reference template rendered.
To set your own label you can do something like this:
<%= PBF.text_input f, :value, label: [text: "Custom"] %>
To add your own css class to the input element / controls do this:
<%= PBF.text_input f, :value, input: [class: "custom"] %>
You can add help text under the input. It could also be rendered template with links, tables, and whatever else.
<%= PBF.text_input f, :value, input: [help: "Help text"] %>
<%= PBF.text_input f, :value, input: [prepend: "$", append: ".00"] %>
You don't need to do multiple calls to create list of radio buttons. One method will do them all:
<%= PBF.radio_buttons f, :value, ["red", "green"] %>
or with custom labels:
<%= PBF.radio_buttons f, :value, [{"R", "red"}, {"G", "green"}] %>
or rendered inline:
<%= PBF.radio_buttons f, :value, ["red", "green", "blue"], input: [inline: true] %>
Very similar to multiple_select
in functionality, you can render collection of
checkboxes. Other options are the same as for radio_buttons
<%= PBF.checkboxes f, :value, ["red", "green", "blue"], selected: ["green"] %>
Besides simple PBF.submit f
you can define custom label and content that goes
next to the button. For example:
<% cancel = link "Cancel", to: "/", class: "btn btn-link" %>
<%= PBF.submit f, "Smash", class: "btn-primary", alternative: cancel %>
When you need to render a piece of content in the context of your form. For example:
<%= PBF.static f, "Current Avatar", avatar_image_tag %>
If changeset is invalid, form elements will have .is-invalid
class added and
.invalid-feedback
container will be appended with an error message.
In order to properly pull in i18n error messages specify translate_error
function that handles it:
config :phoenix_bootstrap_form, [
translate_error_function: &MyApp.ErrorHelpers.translate_error/1
]
By default .col-sm-2
and .col-sm-10
used for label and control colums respectively.
You can change that by passing label_col
and control_col
with form_for
like this:
<% opts = [label_col: "col-sm-4", control_col: "col-sm-8", label_align: "text-sm-left"] %>
<%= form_for @changeset, "/", opts, fn f -> %>
If you need to change it application-wide just edit your config.exs
and add:
config :phoenix_bootstrap_form,
label_col_class: "col-sm-4",
control_col_class: "col-sm-8",
label_align_class: "text-sm-left",
form_group_class: "form-group myclass"
Copyright 2017-2018, Oleg Khabarov