The List Form web part is a web part for adding a list form to any page. It provides a working example of implementing generic SharePoint list forms using the SharePoint Framework (SPFx) and the React and Office UI Fabric libraries.
The web part allows configuring which list to use and if a form for adding a new item, editing or displaying an existing item should be shown. When selecting display or edit form the ID can be defined either as a fixed number or as a query string parameter name. The form fields can be added, ordered using drag-and-drop or removed visually in the web part. A URL including placeholder for the ID can be provided to redirect to after successfully saving the form.
Updated to SPFx 1.7.1 and dependencies, Added Turkish translation, Added RichText Mode and Tinymce Editor
1.0.2
October 14, 2019
Updated to SPFx 1.9.1 and dependencies
1.0.3
July 7, 2020
Updated to SPFx 1.10.0 and dependencies. Fixed required field validation (Harsha Vardhini)
1.0.4
September 12, 2020
Added support for User, UserMulti, Taxonomy, and TaxonomyMulti field types
1.0.5
September 26, 2020
Fix date handling problems and redirect after edit
1.0.6
October 8, 2020
Added support for cascading lookup fields
1.0.7
December 11, 2020
Fix limit of lookup fields
1.0.8
February 7, 2021
Fixed dragging and dropping fields
1.0.9
February 19, 2021
Fixed regular expressions for text validation
Disclaimer
THIS CODE IS PROVIDED AS IS WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, MERCHANTABILITY, OR NON-INFRINGEMENT.
Minimal Path to Awesome
Clone this repository
in the command line run:
npm install
gulp serve
Features
This Web Part illustrates the following concepts on top of the SharePoint Framework:
Using React for building SharePoint Framework client-side web parts.
Using React controlled components for SharePoint form fields.
Using SharePoint REST services to retrieve and update schema and data for lists and fields.
Using Office UI Fabric React components and styles for building user experience consistent with SharePoint and Office.
Integrating drag and drop to provide better user experience for configuring web parts visually.
Using custom drop-down property editors in the property pane.