212 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
212 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
# Building dynamic forms
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Many forms, such as questionaires, can be very similar to one another in format and intent.
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To make it faster and easier to generate different versions of such a form,
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you can create a *dynamic form template* based on metadata that describes the business object model.
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You can then use the template to generate new forms automatically, according to changes in the data model.
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The technique is particularly useful when you have a type of form whose content must
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change frequently to meet rapidly changing business and regulatory requirements.
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A typical use case is a questionaire. You might need to get input from users in different contexts.
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The format and style of the forms a user sees should remain constant, while the actual questions you need to ask vary with the context.
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In this tutorial you will build a dynamic form that presents a basic questionaire.
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You will build an online application for heroes seeking employment.
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The agency is constantly tinkering with the application process, but by using the dynamic form
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you can create the new forms on the fly without changing the application code.
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The tutorial walks you through the following steps.
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1. Enable reactive forms for a project.
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2. Establish a data model to represent form controls.
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3. Populate the model with sample data.
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4. Develop a component to create form controls dynamically.
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The form you create uses input validation and styling to improve the user experience.
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It has a Submit button that is only enabled when all user input is valid, and flags invalid input with color coding and error messages.
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The basic version can evolve to support a richer variety of questions, more graceful rendering, and superior user experience.
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<div class="alert is-helpful">
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See the <live-example name="dynamic-form"></live-example>.
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</div>
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## Prerequisites
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Before doing this tutorial, you should have a basic understanding to the following.
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* [TypeScript](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/home.html "The TypeScript language") and HTML5 programming.
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* Fundamental concepts of [Angular app design](guide/architecture "Introduction to Angular app-design concepts").
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* Basic knowledge of [reactive forms](guide/reactive-forms "Reactive forms guide").
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## Enable reactive forms for your project
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Dynamic forms are based on reactive forms. To give the application access reactive forms directives, the [root module](guide/bootstrapping "Learn about bootstrapping an app from the root module.") imports `ReactiveFormsModule` from the `@angular/forms` library.
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The following code from the example shows the setup in the root module.
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<code-tabs>
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<code-pane header="app.module.ts" path="dynamic-form/src/app/app.module.ts">
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</code-pane>
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<code-pane header="main.ts" path="dynamic-form/src/main.ts">
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</code-pane>
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</code-tabs>
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{@a object-model}
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## Create a form object model
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A dynamic form requires an object model that can describe all scenarios needed by the form functionality.
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The example hero-application form is a set of questions—that is, each control in the form must ask a question and accept an answer.
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The data model for this type of form must represent a question.
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The example includes the `DynamicFormQuestionComponent`, which defines a question as the fundamental object in the model.
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The following `QuestionBase` is a base class for a set of controls that can represent the question and its answer in the form.
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<code-example path="dynamic-form/src/app/question-base.ts" header="src/app/question-base.ts">
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</code-example>
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### Define control classes
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From this base, the example derives two new classes, `TextboxQuestion` and `DropdownQuestion`,
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that represent different control types.
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When you create the form template in the next step, you will instantiate these specific question types in order to render the appropriate controls dynamically.
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* The `TextboxQuestion` control type presents a question and allows users to enter input.
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<code-example path="dynamic-form/src/app/question-textbox.ts" header="src/app/question-textbox.ts"></code-example>
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The `TextboxQuestion` control type will be represented in a form template using an `<input>` element.
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The `type` attribute of the element will be defined based on the `type` field specified in the `options` argument (for example `text`, `email`, `url`).
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* The `DropdownQuestion` control presents a list of choices in a select box.
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<code-example path="dynamic-form/src/app/question-dropdown.ts" header="src/app/question-dropdown.ts"></code-example>
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### Compose form groups
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A dynamic form uses a service to create grouped sets of input controls, based on the form model.
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The following `QuestionControlService` collects a set of `FormGroup` instances that consume the metadata from the question model. You can specify default values and validation rules.
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<code-example path="dynamic-form/src/app/question-control.service.ts" header="src/app/question-control.service.ts"></code-example>
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{@a form-component}
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## Compose dynamic form contents
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The dynamic form itself will be represented by a container component, which you will add in a later step.
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Each question is represented in the form component's template by an `<app-question>` tag, which matches an instance of `DynamicFormQuestionComponent`.
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The `DynamicFormQuestionComponent` is responsible for rendering the details of an individual question based on values in the data-bound question object.
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The form relies on a [`[formGroup]` directive](api/forms/FormGroupDirective "API reference") to connect the template HTML to the underlying control objects.
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The `DynamicFormQuestionComponent` creates form groups and populates them with controls defined in the question model, specifying display and validation rules.
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<code-tabs>
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<code-pane header="dynamic-form-question.component.html" path="dynamic-form/src/app/dynamic-form-question.component.html">
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</code-pane>
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<code-pane header="dynamic-form-question.component.ts" path="dynamic-form/src/app/dynamic-form-question.component.ts">
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</code-pane>
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</code-tabs>
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The goal of the `DynamicFormQuestionComponent` is to present question types defined in your model.
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You only have two types of questions at this point but you can imagine many more.
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The `ngSwitch` statement in the template determines which type of question to display.
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The switch uses directives with the [`formControlName`](api/forms/FormControlName "FormControlName directive API reference") and [`formGroup`](api/forms/FormGroupDirective "FormGroupDirective API reference") selectors. Both directives are defined in `ReactiveFormsModule`.
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{@a questionnaire-data}
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### Supply data
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Another service is needed to supply a specific set of questions from which to build an individual form.
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For this exercise you will create the `QuestionService` to supply this array of questions from the hard-coded sample data.
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In a real-world app, the service might fetch data from a backend system.
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The key point, however, is that you control the hero job-application questions entirely through the objects returned from `QuestionService`.
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To maintain the questionnaire as requirements change, you only need to add, update, and remove objects from the `questions` array.
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The `QuestionService` supplies a set of questions in the form of an array bound to `@Input()` questions.
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<code-example path="dynamic-form/src/app/question.service.ts" header="src/app/question.service.ts">
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</code-example>
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{@a dynamic-template}
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## Create a dynamic form template
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The `DynamicFormComponent` component is the entry point and the main container for the form, which is represented using the `<app-dynamic-form>` in a template.
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The `DynamicFormComponent` component presents a list of questions by binding each one to an `<app-question>` element that matches the `DynamicFormQuestionComponent`.
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<code-tabs>
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<code-pane header="dynamic-form.component.html" path="dynamic-form/src/app/dynamic-form.component.html">
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</code-pane>
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<code-pane header="dynamic-form.component.ts" path="dynamic-form/src/app/dynamic-form.component.ts">
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</code-pane>
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</code-tabs>
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### Display the form
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To display an instance of the dynamic form, the `AppComponent` shell template passes the `questions` array returned by the `QuestionService` to the form container component, `<app-dynamic-form>`.
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<code-example path="dynamic-form/src/app/app.component.ts" header="app.component.ts">
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</code-example>
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The example provides a model for a job application for heroes, but there are
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no references to any specific hero question other than the objects returned by `QuestionService`.
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This separation of model and data allows you to repurpose the components for any type of survey
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as long as it's compatible with the *question* object model.
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### Ensuring valid data
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The form template uses dynamic data binding of metadata to render the form
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without making any hardcoded assumptions about specific questions.
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It adds both control metadata and validation criteria dynamically.
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To ensure valid input, the *Save* button is disabled until the form is in a valid state.
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When the form is valid, you can click *Save* and the app renders the current form values as JSON.
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The following figure shows the final form.
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<div class="lightbox">
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<img src="generated/images/guide/dynamic-form/dynamic-form.png" alt="Dynamic-Form">
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</div>
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## Next steps
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* **Different types of forms and control collection**
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This tutorial shows how to build a a questionaire, which is just one kind of dynamic form.
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The example uses `FormGroup` to collect a set of controls.
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For an example of a different type of dynamic form, see the section [Creating dynamic forms](guide/reactive-forms#creating-dynamic-forms "Create dynamic forms with arrays") in the Reactive Forms guide.
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That example also shows how to use `FormArray` instead of `FormGroup` to collect a set of controls.
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* **Validating user input**
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The section [Validating form input](guide/reactive-forms#validating-form-input "Basic input validation") introduces the basics of how input validation works in reactive forms.
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The [Form validation guide](guide/form-validation "Form validation guide") covers the topic in more depth.
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