docs(forms-validation): edit copy & add explanation of useExisting (#3372)
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@ -2,44 +2,50 @@ include ../_util-fns
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a#top
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:marked
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We can improve overall data quality by validating user input for accuracy and completeness.
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Improve overall data quality by validating user input for accuracy and completeness.
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In this cookbook we show how to validate user input in the UI and display useful validation messages
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This cookbook shows how to validate user input in the UI and display useful validation messages
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using first the template-driven forms and then the reactive forms approach.
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.l-sub-section
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:marked
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Learn more about these choices in the [Forms chapter.](../guide/forms.html)
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Read more about these choices in the [Forms](../guide/forms.html)
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and the [Reactive Forms](../guide/reactive-forms.html) guides.
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a#toc
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:marked
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## Table of Contents
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## Contents
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[Simple Template-Driven Forms](#template1)
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[Template-Driven Forms with validation messages in code](#template2)
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[Reactive Forms with validation in code](#reactive)
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[Custom validation](#custom-validation)
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[Testing](#testing)
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* [Simple template-driven forms](#template1)
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* [Template-driven forms with validation messages in code](#template2)
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- [Component Class](#component-class)
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- [The benefits of messages in code](#improvement)
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- [`FormModule` and template-driven forms](#formmodule)
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* [Reactive forms with validation in code](#reactive)
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- [Switch to the `ReactiveFormsModule`](#reactive-forms-module)
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- [Component template](#reactive-component-template)
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- [Component class](#reactive-component-class)
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- [`FormBuilder` declaration](#formbuilder)
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- [Committing hero value changes](#committing-changes)
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* [Custom validation](#custom-validation)
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- [Custom validation directive](#custom-validation-directive)
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* [Testing considerations](#testing)
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a#live-example
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:marked
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**Try the live example to see and download the full cookbook source code**
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**Try the live example to see and download the full cookbook source code.**
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live-example(name="cb-form-validation" embedded img="cookbooks/form-validation/plunker.png")
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.l-main-section
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a#template1
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:marked
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## Simple Template-Driven Forms
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## Simple template-driven forms
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In the template-driven approach, you arrange
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[form elements](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Guide/HTML/Forms_in_HTML) in the component's template.
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You add Angular form directives (mostly directives beginning `ng...`) to help
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Angular construct a corresponding internal control model that implements form functionality.
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We say that the control model is _implicit_ in the template.
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In template-drive forms, the control model is _implicit_ in the template.
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To validate user input, you add [HTML validation attributes](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Guide/HTML/HTML5/Constraint_validation)
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to the elements. Angular interprets those as well, adding validator functions to the control model.
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@ -47,40 +53,41 @@ a#template1
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Angular exposes information about the state of the controls including
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whether the user has "touched" the control or made changes and if the control values are valid.
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In the first template validation example,
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we add more HTML to read that control state and update the display appropriately.
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Here's an excerpt from the template html for a single input box control bound to the hero name:
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In this first template validation example,
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notice the HTML that reads the control state and updates the display appropriately.
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Here's an excerpt from the template HTML for a single input control bound to the hero name:
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+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/template/hero-form-template1.component.html','name-with-error-msg','template/hero-form-template1.component.html (Hero name)')(format='.')
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:marked
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Note the following:
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- The `<input>` element carries the HTML validation attributes: `required`, `minlength`, and `maxlength`.
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- We set the `name` attribute of the input box to `"name"` so Angular can track this input element and associate it
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- The `name` attribute of the input is set to `"name"` so Angular can track this input element and associate it
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with an Angular form control called `name` in its internal control model.
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- We use the `[(ngModel)]` directive to two-way data bind the input box to the `hero.name` property.
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- The `[(ngModel)]` directive allows two-way data binding between the input box to the `hero.name` property.
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- We set a template variable (`#name`) to the value `"ngModel"` (always `ngModel`).
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This gives us a reference to the Angular `NgModel` directive
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associated with this control that we can use _in the template_
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- The template variable (`#name`) has the value `"ngModel"` (always `ngModel`).
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This gives you a reference to the Angular `NgModel` directive
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associated with this control that you can use _in the template_
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to check for control states such as `valid` and `dirty`.
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- The `*ngIf` on `<div>` element reveals a set of nested message `divs` but only if there are "name" errors and
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- The `*ngIf` on the `<div>` element reveals a set of nested message `divs` but only if there are "name" errors and
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the control is either `dirty` or `touched`.
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- Each nested `<div>` can present a custom message for one of the possible validation errors.
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We've prepared messages for `required`, `minlength`, and `maxlength`.
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There are messages for `required`, `minlength`, and `maxlength`.
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The full template repeats this kind of layout for each data entry control on the form.
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a#why-check
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.l-sub-section
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:marked
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#### Why check _dirty_ and _touched_?
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We shouldn't show errors for a new hero before the user has had a chance to edit the value.
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The app shouldn't show errors for a new hero before the user has had a chance to edit the value.
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The checks for `dirty` and `touched` prevent premature display of errors.
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Learn about `dirty` and `touched` in the [Forms](../guide/forms.html) chapter.
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Learn about `dirty` and `touched` in the [Forms](../guide/forms.html) guide.
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:marked
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The component class manages the hero model used in the data binding
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as well as other code to support the view.
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@ -102,23 +109,24 @@ a#template1
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.l-main-section
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a#template2
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:marked
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## Template-Driven Forms with validation messages in code
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## Template-driven forms with validation messages in code
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While the layout is straightforward,
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there are obvious shortcomings with the way we handle validation messages:
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there are obvious shortcomings with the way it's handling validation messages:
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* It takes a lot of HTML to represent all possible error conditions.
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This gets out of hand when there are many controls and many validation rules.
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* We're not fond of so much JavaScript logic in HTML.
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* There's a lot of JavaScript logic in the HTML.
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* The messages are static strings, hard-coded into the template.
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We often require dynamic messages that we should shape in code.
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It's easier to maintain _dynamic_ messages in the component class.
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We can move the logic and the messages into the component with a few changes to
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In this example, you can move the logic and the messages into the component with a few changes to
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the template and component.
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Here's the hero name again, excerpted from the revised template ("Template 2"), next to the original version:
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Here's the hero name again, excerpted from the revised template
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(Template 2), next to the original version:
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+makeTabs(
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`cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/template/hero-form-template2.component.html,
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cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/template/hero-form-template1.component.html`,
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- The hard-code error message `<divs>` are gone.
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- There's a new attribute, `forbiddenName`, that is actually a custom validation directive.
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It invalidates the control if the user enters "bob" anywhere in the name ([try it](#live-example)).
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We discuss [custom validation directives](#custom-validation) later in this cookbook.
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It invalidates the control if the user enters "bob" in the name `<input>`([try it](#live-example)).
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See the [custom validation](#custom-validation) section later in this cookbook for more information
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on custom validation directives.
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- The `#name` template variable is gone because we no longer refer to the Angular control for this element.
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- The `#name` template variable is gone because the app no longer refers to the Angular control for this element.
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- Binding to the new `formErrors.name` property is sufficent to display all name validation error messages.
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#### Component class
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The original component code stays the same.
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We _added_ new code to acquire the Angular form control and compose error messages.
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a#component-class
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:marked
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### Component class
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The original component code for Template 1 stayed the same; however,
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Template 2 requires some changes in the component. This section covers the code
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necessary in Template 2's component class to acquire the Angular
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form control and compose error messages.
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The first step is to acquire the form control that Angular created from the template by querying for it.
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Look back at the top of the component template where we set the
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Look back at the top of the component template at the
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`#heroForm` template variable in the `<form>` element:
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+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/template/hero-form-template1.component.html','form-tag','template/hero-form-template1.component.html (form tag)')(format='.')
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:marked
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The `heroForm` variable is a reference to the control model that Angular derived from the template.
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We tell Angular to inject that model into the component class's `currentForm` property using a `@ViewChild` query:
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Tell Angular to inject that model into the component class's `currentForm` property using a `@ViewChild` query:
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+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/template/hero-form-template2.component.ts','view-child','template/hero-form-template2.component.ts (heroForm)')(format='.')
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:marked
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- Angular `@ViewChild` queries for a template variable when you pass it
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the name of that variable as a string (`'heroForm'` in this case).
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- The `heroForm` object changes several times during the life of the component, most notably when we add a new hero.
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We'll have to re-inspect it periodically.
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- The `heroForm` object changes several times during the life of the component, most notably when you add a new hero.
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Periodically inspecting it reveals these changes.
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- Angular calls the `ngAfterViewChecked` [lifecycle hook method](../guide/lifecycle-hooks.html#afterview)
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when anything changes in the view.
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That's the right time to see if there's a new `heroForm` object.
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- When there _is_ a new `heroForm` model, we subscribe to its `valueChanged` _Observable_ property.
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The `onValueChanged` handler looks for validation errors after every user keystroke.
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- When there _is_ a new `heroForm` model, `formChanged()` subscribes to its `valueChanges` _Observable_ property.
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The `onValueChanged` handler looks for validation errors after every keystroke.
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+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/template/hero-form-template2.component.ts','handler','template/hero-form-template2.component.ts (handler)')(format='.')
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:marked
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Only two hero properties have validation rules, `name` and `power`.
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The messages are empty strings when the hero data are valid.
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For each field, the handler
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- clears the prior error message if any
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- acquires the field's corresponding Angular form control
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- if such a control exists _and_ its been changed ("dirty") _and_ its invalid ...
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- the handler composes a consolidated error message for all of the control's errors.
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For each field, the `onValueChanged` handler does the following:
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- Clears the prior error message, if any.
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- Acquires the field's corresponding Angular form control.
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- If such a control exists _and_ it's been changed ("dirty")
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_and_ it's invalid, the handler composes a consolidated error message for all of the control's errors.
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We'll need some error messages of course, a set for each validated property, one message per validation rule:
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Next, the component needs some error messages of course—a set for each validated property with
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one message per validation rule:
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+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/template/hero-form-template2.component.ts','messages','template/hero-form-template2.component.ts (messages)')(format='.')
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:marked
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Now every time the user makes a change, the `onValueChanged` handler checks for validation errors and produces messages accordingly.
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### Is this an improvement?
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a#improvement
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:marked
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### The benefits of messages in code
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Clearly the template got substantially smaller while the component code got substantially larger.
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It's not easy to see the benefit when there are just three fields and only two of them have validation rules.
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Consider what happens as we increase the number of validated fields and rules.
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Consider what happens as the number of validated
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fields and rules increases.
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In general, HTML is harder to read and maintain than code.
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The initial template was already large and threatening to get rapidly worse as we add more validation message `<divs>`.
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The initial template was already large and threatening to get rapidly worse
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with the addition of more validation message `<div>` elements.
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After moving the validation messaging to the component,
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the template grows more slowly and proportionally.
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Both trends are manageable.
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Now that the messages are in code, we have more flexibility. We can compose messages more intelligently.
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We can refactor the messages out of the component, perhaps to a service class that retrieves them from the server.
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Now that the messages are in code, you have more flexibility and can compose messages more efficiently.
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You can refactor the messages out of the component, perhaps to a service class that retrieves them from the server.
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In short, there are more opportunities to improve message handling now that text and logic have moved from template to code.
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a#formmodule
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:marked
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### _FormModule_ and template-driven forms
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Angular has two different forms modules — `FormsModule` and `ReactiveFormsModule` —
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that correspond with the two approaches to form development.
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Both modules come from the same `@angular/forms` library package.
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Angular has two different forms modules—`FormsModule` and
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`ReactiveFormsModule`—that correspond with the
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two approaches to form development. Both modules come
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from the same `@angular/forms` library package.
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We've been reviewing the "Template-driven" approach which requires the `FormsModule`
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Here's how we imported it in the `HeroFormTemplateModule`.
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You've been reviewing the "Template-driven" approach which requires the `FormsModule`.
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Here's how you imported it in the `HeroFormTemplateModule`.
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+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/template/hero-form-template.module.ts','','template/hero-form-template.module.ts')(format='.')
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.l-sub-section
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:marked
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We haven't talked about the `SharedModule` or its `SubmittedComponent` which appears at the bottom of every
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This guide hasn't talked about the `SharedModule` or its `SubmittedComponent` which appears at the bottom of every
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form template in this cookbook.
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They're not germane to the validation story. Look at the [live example](#live-example) if you're interested.
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.l-main-section
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a#reactive
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:marked
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## Reactive Forms
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## Reactive forms with validation in code
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In the template-driven approach, you markup the template with form elements, validation attributes,
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and `ng...` directives from the Angular `FormsModule`.
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@ -244,30 +265,34 @@ a#reactive
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This approach requires a bit more effort. *You have to write the control model and manage it*.
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In return, you can
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* add, change, and remove validation functions on the fly
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* manipulate the control model dynamically from within the component
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* [test](#testing) validation and control logic with isolated unit tests.
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This allows you to do the following:
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* Add, change, and remove validation functions on the fly.
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* Manipulate the control model dynamically from within the component.
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* [Test](#testing) validation and control logic with isolated unit tests.
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The third cookbook sample re-writes the hero form in _reactive forms_ style.
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The following cookbook sample re-writes the hero form in _reactive forms_ style.
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a#reactive-forms-module
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:marked
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### Switch to the _ReactiveFormsModule_
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The reactive forms classes and directives come from the Angular `ReactiveFormsModule`, not the `FormsModule`.
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The application module for the "Reactive Forms" feature in this sample looks like this:
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The application module for the reactive forms feature in this sample looks like this:
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+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/reactive/hero-form-reactive.module.ts','','src/app/reactive/hero-form-reactive.module.ts')(format='.')
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:marked
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The "Reactive Forms" feature module and component are in the `src/app/reactive` folder.
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Let's focus on the `HeroFormReactiveComponent` there, starting with its template.
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The reactive forms feature module and component are in the `src/app/reactive` folder.
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Focus on the `HeroFormReactiveComponent` there, starting with its template.
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a#reactive-component-template
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:marked
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### Component template
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We begin by changing the `<form>` tag so that it binds the Angular `formGroup` directive in the template
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Begin by changing the `<form>` tag so that it binds the Angular `formGroup` directive in the template
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to the `heroForm` property in the component class.
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The `heroForm` is the control model that the component class builds and maintains.
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+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/reactive/hero-form-reactive.component.html','form-tag')(format='.')
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:marked
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Then we modify the template HTML elements to match the _reactive forms_ style.
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Next, modify the template HTML elements to match the _reactive forms_ style.
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Here is the "name" portion of the template again, revised for reactive forms and compared with the template-driven version:
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+makeTabs(
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`cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/reactive/hero-form-reactive.component.html,
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@ -277,10 +302,11 @@ a#reactive
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hero-form-template1.component.html (name #2)`)
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:marked
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Key changes:
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- the validation attributes are gone (except `required`) because we'll be validating in code.
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Key changes are:
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- The validation attributes are gone (except `required`) because
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validating happens in code.
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- `required` remains, not for validation purposes (we'll cover that in the code),
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- `required` remains, not for validation purposes (that's in the code),
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but rather for css styling and accessibility.
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.l-sub-section
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@ -289,26 +315,28 @@ a#reactive
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(and perhaps the `aria-required` attribute) when the control has the `required` validator function.
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Until then, apply the `required` attribute _and_ add the `Validator.required` function
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to the control model, as we'll do below.
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to the control model, as you'll see below.
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:marked
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- the `formControlName` replaces the `name` attribute; it serves the same
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purpose of correlating the input box with the Angular form control.
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- The `formControlName` replaces the `name` attribute; it serves the same
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purpose of correlating the input with the Angular form control.
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- the two-way `[(ngModel)]` binding is gone.
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- The two-way `[(ngModel)]` binding is gone.
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The reactive approach does not use data binding to move data into and out of the form controls.
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We do that in code.
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That's all in code.
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.l-sub-section
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:marked
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The retreat from data binding is a principle of the reactive paradigm rather than a technical limitation.
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a#reactive-component-class
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:marked
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### Component class
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The component class is now responsible for defining and managing the form control model.
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Angular no longer derives the control model from the template so we can no longer query for it.
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We create the Angular form control model explicitly with the help of the `FormBuilder`.
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Angular no longer derives the control model from the template so you can no longer query for it.
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You can create the Angular form control model explicitly with
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the help of the `FormBuilder` class.
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Here's the section of code devoted to that process, paired with the template-driven code it replaces:
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+makeTabs(
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|
@ -318,26 +346,27 @@ a#reactive
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`reactive/hero-form-reactive.component.ts (FormBuilder),
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template/hero-form-template2.component.ts (ViewChild)`)
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:marked
|
||||
- we inject the `FormBuilder` in a constructor.
|
||||
- Inject `FormBuilder` in a constructor.
|
||||
|
||||
- we call a `buildForm` method in the `ngOnInit` [lifecycle hook method](../guide/lifecycle-hooks.html#hooks-overview)
|
||||
because that's when we'll have the hero data. We'll call it again in the `addHero` method.
|
||||
- Call a `buildForm` method in the `ngOnInit` [lifecycle hook method](../guide/lifecycle-hooks.html#hooks-overview)
|
||||
because that's when you'll have the hero data. Call it again in the `addHero` method.
|
||||
.l-sub-section
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
A real app would retrieve the hero asynchronously from a data service, a task best performed in the `ngOnInit` hook.
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
- the `buildForm` method uses the `FormBuilder` (`fb`) to declare the form control model.
|
||||
- The `buildForm` method uses the `FormBuilder`, `fb`, to declare the form control model.
|
||||
Then it attaches the same `onValueChanged` handler (there's a one line difference)
|
||||
to the form's `valueChanged` event and calls it immediately
|
||||
to the form's `valueChanges` event and calls it immediately
|
||||
to set error messages for the new control model.
|
||||
|
||||
a#formbuilder
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
#### _FormBuilder_ declaration
|
||||
The `FormBuilder` declaration object specifies the three controls of the sample's hero form.
|
||||
|
||||
Each control spec is a control name with an array value.
|
||||
The first array element is the current value of the corresponding hero field.
|
||||
The (optional) second value is a validator function or an array of validator functions.
|
||||
The optional second value is a validator function or an array of validator functions.
|
||||
|
||||
Most of the validator functions are stock validators provided by Angular as static methods of the `Validators` class.
|
||||
Angular has stock validators that correspond to the standard HTML validation attributes.
|
||||
|
@ -349,6 +378,7 @@ a#reactive
|
|||
:marked
|
||||
Learn more about `FormBuilder` in the [Introduction to FormBuilder](../guide/reactive-forms.html#formbuilder) section of Reactive Forms guide.
|
||||
|
||||
a#committing-changes
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
#### Committing hero value changes
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -357,20 +387,20 @@ a#reactive
|
|||
The developer decides _when and how_ to update the data model from control values.
|
||||
|
||||
This sample updates the model twice:
|
||||
1. when the user submits the form
|
||||
1. when the user chooses to add a new hero
|
||||
1. When the user submits the form.
|
||||
1. When the user adds a new hero.
|
||||
|
||||
The `onSubmit` method simply replaces the `hero` object with the combined values of the form:
|
||||
The `onSubmit()` method simply replaces the `hero` object with the combined values of the form:
|
||||
+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/reactive/hero-form-reactive.component.ts','on-submit')(format='.')
|
||||
.l-sub-section
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
This example is "lucky" in that the `heroForm.value` properties _just happen_ to
|
||||
This example is lucky in that the `heroForm.value` properties _just happen_ to
|
||||
correspond _exactly_ to the hero data object properties.
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
The `addHero` method discards pending changes and creates a brand new `hero` model object.
|
||||
The `addHero()` method discards pending changes and creates a brand new `hero` model object.
|
||||
+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/reactive/hero-form-reactive.component.ts','add-hero')(format='.')
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
Then it calls `buildForm` again which replaces the previous `heroForm` control model with a new one.
|
||||
Then it calls `buildForm()` again which replaces the previous `heroForm` control model with a new one.
|
||||
The `<form>` tag's `[formGroup]` binding refreshes the page with the new control model.
|
||||
|
||||
Here's the complete reactive component file, compared to the two template-driven component files.
|
||||
|
@ -385,18 +415,18 @@ a#reactive
|
|||
|
||||
.l-sub-section
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
Run the [live example](#live-example) to see how the reactive form behaves
|
||||
Run the [live example](#live-example) to see how the reactive form behaves,
|
||||
and to compare all of the files in this cookbook sample.
|
||||
|
||||
.l-main-section
|
||||
a#custom-validation
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
## Custom validation
|
||||
This cookbook sample has a custom `forbiddenNamevalidator` function that's applied to both the
|
||||
This cookbook sample has a custom `forbiddenNamevalidator()` function that's applied to both the
|
||||
template-driven and the reactive form controls. It's in the `src/app/shared` folder
|
||||
and declared in the `SharedModule`.
|
||||
|
||||
Here's the `forbiddenNamevalidator` function itself:
|
||||
Here's the `forbiddenNamevalidator()` function:
|
||||
+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/shared/forbidden-name.directive.ts','custom-validator', 'shared/forbidden-name.directive.ts (forbiddenNameValidator)')(format='.')
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
The function is actually a factory that takes a regular expression to detect a _specific_ forbidden name
|
||||
|
@ -406,44 +436,59 @@ a#custom-validation
|
|||
the validator rejects any hero name containing "bob".
|
||||
Elsewhere it could reject "alice" or any name that the configuring regular expression matches.
|
||||
|
||||
The `forbiddenNamevalidator` factory returns the configured validator function.
|
||||
The `forbiddenNameValidator` factory returns the configured validator function.
|
||||
That function takes an Angular control object and returns _either_
|
||||
null if the control value is valid _or_ a validation error object.
|
||||
The validation error object typically has a property whose name is the validation key ('forbiddenName')
|
||||
and whose value is an arbitrary dictionary of values that we could insert into an error message (`{name}`).
|
||||
The validation error object typically has a property whose name is the validation key, `'forbiddenName'`,
|
||||
and whose value is an arbitrary dictionary of values that you could insert into an error message (`{name}`).
|
||||
|
||||
.l-sub-section
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
Learn more about validator functions in a _forthcoming_ chapter on custom form validation.
|
||||
a#custom-validation-directive
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
#### Custom validation directive
|
||||
In the reactive forms component we added a configured `forbiddenNamevalidator`
|
||||
to the bottom of the `'name'` control's validator function list.
|
||||
### Custom validation directive
|
||||
In the reactive forms component, the `'name'` control's validator function list
|
||||
has a `forbiddenNameValidator` at the bottom.
|
||||
+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/reactive/hero-form-reactive.component.ts','name-validators', 'reactive/hero-form-reactive.component.ts (name validators)')(format='.')
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
In the template-driven component template, we add the selector (`forbiddenName`) of a custom _attribute directive_ to the name's input box
|
||||
and configured it to reject "bob".
|
||||
In the _template-driven_ example, the `<input>` has the selector (`forbiddenName`)
|
||||
of a custom _attribute directive_, which rejects "bob".
|
||||
+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/template/hero-form-template2.component.html','name-input', 'template/hero-form-template2.component.html (name input)')(format='.')
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
The corresponding `ForbiddenValidatorDirective` is a wrapper around the `forbiddenNamevalidator`.
|
||||
The corresponding `ForbiddenValidatorDirective` is a wrapper around the `forbiddenNameValidator`.
|
||||
|
||||
Angular forms recognizes the directive's role in the validation process because the directive registers itself
|
||||
Angular `forms` recognizes the directive's role in the validation process because the directive registers itself
|
||||
with the `NG_VALIDATORS` provider, a provider with an extensible collection of validation directives.
|
||||
+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/shared/forbidden-name.directive.ts','directive-providers', 'shared/forbidden-name.directive.ts (providers)')(format='.')
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
The rest of the directive is unremarkable and we present it here without further comment.
|
||||
Here is the rest of the directive to help you get an idea of how it all comes together:
|
||||
+makeExample('cb-form-validation/ts/src/app/shared/forbidden-name.directive.ts','directive', 'shared/forbidden-name.directive.ts (directive)')
|
||||
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
.l-sub-section
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
See the [Attribute Directives](../guide/attribute-directives.html) chapter.
|
||||
If you are familiar with Angular validations, you may have noticed
|
||||
that the custom validation directive is instantiated with `useExisting`
|
||||
rather than `useClass`. The registered validator must be _this instance_ of
|
||||
the `ForbiddenValidatorDirective`—the instance in the form with
|
||||
its `forbiddenName` property bound to “bob". If you were to replace
|
||||
`useExisting` with `useClass`, then you’d be registering a new class instance, one that
|
||||
doesn’t have a `forbiddenName`.
|
||||
|
||||
To see this in action, run the example and then type “bob” in the name of Hero Form 2.
|
||||
Notice that you get a validation error. Now change from `useExisting` to `useClass` and try again.
|
||||
This time, when you type “bob”, there's no "bob" error message.
|
||||
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
.l-sub-section
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
For more information on attaching behavior to elements,
|
||||
see [Attribute Directives](../guide/attribute-directives.html).
|
||||
|
||||
.l-main-section
|
||||
a#testing
|
||||
:marked
|
||||
## Testing Considerations
|
||||
|
||||
We can write _isolated unit tests_ of validation and control logic in _Reactive Forms_.
|
||||
You can write _isolated unit tests_ of validation and control logic in _Reactive Forms_.
|
||||
|
||||
_Isolated unit tests_ probe the component class directly, independent of its
|
||||
interactions with its template, the DOM, other dependencies, or Angular itself.
|
||||
|
@ -451,11 +496,12 @@ a#testing
|
|||
Such tests have minimal setup, are quick to write, and easy to maintain.
|
||||
They do not require the `Angular TestBed` or asynchronous testing practices.
|
||||
|
||||
That's not possible with _Template-driven_ forms.
|
||||
That's not possible with _template-driven_ forms.
|
||||
The template-driven approach relies on Angular to produce the control model and
|
||||
to derive validation rules from the HTML validation attributes.
|
||||
You must use the `Angular TestBed` to create component test instances,
|
||||
write asynchronous tests, and interact with the DOM.
|
||||
|
||||
While not difficult, this takes more time, work and skill —
|
||||
factors that tend to diminish test code coverage and quality.
|
||||
While not difficult, this takes more time, work and
|
||||
skill—factors that tend to diminish test code
|
||||
coverage and quality.
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue