symfonycasts / dynamic-forms
Add dynamic/dependent fields to Symfony forms
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Requires
- php: >=8.1
- symfony/form: ^5.4|^6.3|^7.0
Requires (Dev)
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.6
- symfony/framework-bundle: ^6.3|^7.0
- symfony/options-resolver: ^5.4|^6.3|^7.0
- symfony/phpunit-bridge: ^5.4.32|^6.3.9|^7.0
- symfony/twig-bundle: ^5.4|^6.3|^7.0
- twig/twig: ^2.15|^3.0
- zenstruck/browser: ^1.4
README
NOTE: This package is currently experimental. It seems to work great - but forms are complex! If you find a bug, please open an issue!
Ever have a form field that depends on another?
You can find a Demo with LiveComponent on Symfony UX.
- Show a field only if another field is set to a specific value;
- Change the options of a field based on the value of another field;
- Have multiple-level dependencies (e.g. field A depends on field B which depends on field C).
public function buildForm(FormBuilderInterface $builder, array $options): void { $builder = new DynamicFormBuilder($builder); $builder->add('meal', ChoiceType::class, [ 'choices' => [ 'Breakfast' => 'breakfast', 'Lunch' => 'lunch', 'Dinner' => 'dinner', ], ]); $builder->addDependent('mainFood', ['meal'], function(DependentField $field, string $meal) { // dynamically add choices based on the meal! $choices = ['...']; $field->add(ChoiceType::class, [ 'placeholder' => null === $meal ? 'Select a meal first' : sprintf('What is for %s?', $meal->getReadable()), 'choices' => $choices, 'disabled' => null === $meal, ]); });
Installation
Install the package with:
composer require symfonycasts/dynamic-forms
Done - you're ready to build dynamic forms!
Usage
Setting up a dependent field is two parts:
- Usage in PHP - set up your Symfony form to handle the dynamic fields;
- Updating the Frontend - adding code to your frontend so that when one field changes, part of the form is re-rendered.
Usage in PHP
Start by wrapping your FormBuilderInterface
with a DynamicFormBuilder
:
use Symfonycasts\DynamicForms\DynamicFormBuilder; // ... public function buildForm(FormBuilderInterface $builder, array $options): void { $builder = new DynamicFormBuilder($builder); // ... }
DynamicFormBuilder
has all the same methods as FormBuilderInterface
plus
one extra: addDependent()
. If a field depends on another, use this method
instead of add()
// src/Form/FeedbackForm.php // ... use Symfonycasts\DynamicForms\DependentField; use Symfonycasts\DynamicForms\DynamicFormBuilder; class FeedbackForm extends AbstractType { public function buildForm(FormBuilderInterface $builder, array $options) { $builder = new DynamicFormBuilder($builder); $builder->add('rating', ChoiceType::class, [ 'choices' => [ 'Select a rating' => null, 'Great' => 5, 'Good' => 4, 'Okay' => 3, 'Bad' => 2, 'Terrible' => 1 ], ]); $builder->addDependent('badRatingNotes', 'rating', function(DependentField $field, ?int $rating) { if (null === $rating || $rating >= 3) { return; // field not needed } $field->add(TextareaType::class, [ 'label' => 'What went wrong?', 'attr' => ['rows' => 3], 'help' => sprintf('Because you gave a %d rating, we\'d love to know what went wrong.', $rating), ]); }); } }
The addDependent()
method takes 3 arguments:
- The name of the field to add;
- The name (or names) of the field that this field depends on;
- A callback that will be called when the form is submitted. This callback
receives a
DependentField
object as the first argument then the value of each dependent field as the next arguments.
Behind the scenes, this works by registering several form event listeners. The callback be executed when the form is first created (using the initial data) and then again when the form is submitted. This means that the callback may be called multiple times.
Rendering the field is the same - just be sure to make sure the field exists if it's conditionally added:
{{ form_start(form) }} {{ form_row(form.rating) }} {% if form.badRatingNotes is defined %} {{ form_row(form.badRatingNotes) }} {% endif %} <button>Send Feedback</button> {{ form_end(form) }}
Updating the Frontend
In the previous example, when the rating
field changes, the form (or part of
the form) needs to be re-rendered so the badRatingNotes
field can be added.
This library doesn't handle this for you, but here are the 2 main options:
A) Use Live Components
This is the easiest method: by rendering your form inside a live component, it will automatically re-render when the form changes.
B) Use Symfony UX Turbo
If you are already using Symfony UX Turbo on your website, you can have a dynamic form running quickly without any JavaScript.
Or you may want to install Symfony UX Turbo, check out the documentation.
Note
You only need to have Turbo Frame, you can disable Turbo Drive if you do not use it, or do not want to use it.
ie: Turbo.session.drive = false;
Simply add a <turbo-frame>
around your form:
<turbo-frame id="rating-form"> {{ form(form) }} </turbo-frame>
From here you need two small changes:
First, in your form type:
- You need to add an attribute on the choice field, so it auto-submits the form when changed (may need to be adapted to your own form if more complex)
- Add a submit button, so in the controller you can differenciate from an auto-submit versus a user action
// src/Form/FeedbackForm.php // ... class FeedbackForm extends AbstractType { public function buildForm(FormBuilderInterface $builder, array $options) { $builder = new DynamicFormBuilder($builder); $builder->add('rating', ChoiceType::class, [ 'choices' => [ 'Select a rating' => null, 'Great' => 5, 'Good' => 4, 'Okay' => 3, 'Bad' => 2, 'Terrible' => 1 ], + // This will allow the form to auto-submit on value change + 'attr' => ['onchange' => 'this.form.requestSubmit()'], ]); + // This will allow to differenciate between a user submition and an auto-submit + $builder->add('submit', SubmitType::class, [ + 'attr' => ['value' => 'submit'], // Needed for Turbo + ]); $builder->addDependent('badRatingNotes', 'rating', function(DependentField $field, ?int $rating) { if (null === $rating || $rating >= 3) { return; // field not needed } $field->add(TextareaType::class, [ 'label' => 'What went wrong?', 'attr' => ['rows' => 3], 'help' => sprintf('Because you gave a %d rating, we\'d love to know what went wrong.', $rating), ]); }); } }
Second, in your controller:
- Specify the action on your form, this is needed for Turbo Frame
- Handle the auto-submit by checking if the button has been clicked
// src/Controller/FeedbackController.php #[Route('/feedback', name: 'feedback')] public function feedback(Request $request): Response { //... - $feedbackForm = $this->createForm(FeedbackForm::class); + $feedbackForm = $this->createForm(FeedbackForm::class, options: [ + // This is needed by Turbo Frame, it is not specific to Dependent Symfony Form Fields + 'action' => $this->generateUrl('feedback'), + ]); $feedbackForm->handleRequest($request); if ($feedbackForm->isSubmitted() && $feedbackForm->isValid()) { + /** @var SubmitButton $submitButton */ + $submitButton = $feedbackForm->get('submit'); + if (!$submitButton->isClicked()) { + return $this->render('feedback.html.twig', ['feedbackForm' => $feedbackForm]); + } // Your code here // ... return $this->redirectToRoute('home'); } return $this->render('feedback.html.twig', ['feedbackForm' => $feedbackForm]); }
C) Write custom JavaScript
If you're not using Live Components, nor Turbo Frames, you'll need to write some custom
JavaScript to listen to the change
event on the rating
field and then
make an AJAX call to re-render the form. The AJAX call should submit the
form to its usual endpoint (or any endpoint that will submit the form), take
the HTML response, extract the parts that need to be re-rendered and then replace
the HTML on the page.
This is a non-trivial task and there may be room for improvement in this library to make this easier. If you have ideas, please open an issue!