reactive_forms_generator 4.6.0-beta.2 reactive_forms_generator: ^4.6.0-beta.2 copied to clipboard
Generator for reactive_forms. Generates form classes based on model.
reactive_forms_generator #
ReactiveFormsGenerator
Welcome to ReactiveFormsGenerator, code generator for reactive_forms which will save you tons of time and make your forms type safe.
There is no reason to write code manually! Let the code generation work for you.
Table of Contents #
Motivation #
One of the goals of this package is to make reactive_forms package even more cool and fun to use.
Let's see what issues this package tries to mitigate.
Here is how typical reactive_forms
form looks like
/// form instantiation
FormGroup buildForm() =>
fb.group(<String, Object>{
'email': FormControl<String>(
validators: [Validators.required, Validators.email],
),
'password': ['', Validators.required, Validators.minLength(8)],
'rememberMe': false,
});
/// form itself
final form = ReactiveFormBuilder(
form: buildForm,
builder: (context, form, child) {
return Column(
children: [
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControlName: 'email',
),
const SizedBox(height: 16.0),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControlName: 'password',
),
const SizedBox(height: 16.0),
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () {
if (form.valid) {
print(form.value);
} else {
form.markAllAsTouched();
}
},
child: const Text('Sign Up'),
),
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () =>
form.resetState({
'email': ControlState<String>(value: null),
'password': ControlState<String>(value: null),
'rememberMe': ControlState<bool>(value: false),
}, removeFocus: true),
child: const Text('Reset all'),
),
],
);
},
);
-
First issue is
String
identifiers which are used to define fields. Technically you can extract them into separate class, enum or whatever you like. But this is manual work which you have to do each time you create the form. The other disadvantage is when you refer to any field by thisString
identifier you loose static type check. There is no way for static analyser to check if some random field namelogin
is suitable to put in particular widget. So you can easily get the form which looksok
but fails to build due to the typo in field names and putting thelogin
field intoReactiveCheckbox
field. Isn't it better to let the code generation to do it for you? -
Second issue is output which is always
Map<String, Object>
. It is ok for languages like JS. But for the typed language you would prefer to get the output fom the form like model. And avoid manual type casting like this one.
final document = DocumentInput(
subTypeId: form.value["subType"] as DocumentSubTypeMixin,
documentNumber: form.value["documentNumber"] as String,
countryIsoCode: form.value["country"] as CountryMixin,
countryOfIssueIsoCode: form.value["country"] as CountryMixin,
issueDate: form.value["issueDate"] as DateTime,
vesselId: form.value["vessel"] as VesselMixin,
);
These are two main issues that forced me to write this generator. In the next chapters of documentation you'll see how we define and annotate the model which describes the form state and how easy and elegant it works with a bit of magic from code generation.
How to use #
Minimum Requirements #
- Dart SDK: >=2.12.0 <3.0.0
- Flutter: >= 2.2.0
Installation #
To use [reactive_forms_generator], you will need your typical [build_runner]/code-generator setup.
First, install [build_runner] and [reactive_forms_generator] by adding them to your pubspec.yaml
file:
# pubspec.yaml
dependencies:
reactive_forms:
reactive_forms_annotations:
dev_dependencies:
build_runner:
reactive_forms_generator:
This installs three packages:
- build_runner, the tool to run code-generators
- reactive_forms, form engine itself
- reactive_forms_generator, the code generator
- reactive_forms_annotations, a package containing annotations for [reactive_forms_generator].
Ignore lint warnings on generated files #
It is likely that the code generated by [reactive_forms_generator] will cause your linter to report warnings.
The solution to this problem is to tell the linter to ignore generated files,
by modifying your analysis_options.yaml
:
analyzer:
exclude:
- "**/*.gform.dart"
Run the generator #
Note that like most code-generators, reactive_forms_generator
will need you to both import the annotation (meta)
and use the part keyword on the top of your files.
Make sure you added required imports before running the generator
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
import 'package:reactive_forms/reactive_forms.dart';
import 'package:reactive_forms_annotations/reactive_forms_annotations.dart';
part 'my_file.gform.dart';
To run the code generator you have two possibilities:
- If your package depends on Flutter:
flutter pub run build_runner build
- If your package does not depend on Flutter:
dart pub run build_runner build
Features #
Basics #
Let's start from simple login form.
First we need to define our form model
Model
class Basic {
final String email;
final String password;
Basic({this.email = '', this.password = ''});
}
We defined here a simple model with non-nullable email
and password
fields.
Annotation
The next step is to add annotations to help generator do his job.
import 'package:reactive_forms_annotations/reactive_forms_annotations.dart';
@Rf()
class Basic {
final String email;
final String password;
Basic({
@RfControl() this.email = '',
@RfControl() this.password = '',
});
}
ReactiveFormAnnotation
- tells the generator that we want to Form based on this model.
FormControlAnnotation
- maps fields to control elements.
Validation
The login form should not proceed if there is any empty values. We need to modify our code to add some required
validators.
import 'package:example/helpers.dart';
import 'package:reactive_forms_annotations/reactive_forms_annotations.dart';
@Rf()
class Basic {
final String email;
final String password;
Basic({
@RfControl(
validators: const [RequiredValidator()],
) this.email = '',
@RfControl(
validators: const [RequiredValidator()],
) this.password = '',
});
}
As far as we are using annotations - validators should be top level functions or static class fields or const constructors.
Now we are ready to run our form generator. .
Form
Let's build our form based on generated code
final form = BasicFormBuilder(
// setup form model with initial data
model: Basic(),
// form builder
builder: (context, formModel, child) {
return Column(
children: [
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.emailControl,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'The email must not be empty',
},
decoration: const InputDecoration(labelText: 'Email'),
),
const SizedBox(height: 8.0),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.passwordControl,
obscureText: true,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'The password must not be empty',
},
textInputAction: TextInputAction.done,
decoration: const InputDecoration(labelText: 'Password'),
),
const SizedBox(height: 8.0),
ReactiveBasicFormConsumer(
builder: (context, form, child) {
return ElevatedButton(
child: Text('Submit'),
onPressed: form.form.valid
? () {
print(form.model.email);
print(form.model.password);
}
: null,
);
},
),
],
);
},
);
BasicFormBuilder
- generated widget that injects form into context
ReactiveTextField
- bundled text fields
ReactiveBasicFormConsumer
- generated widget that rebuilds upon form change
You can get access to prefilled form model by calling form.model.[field-name]
.
Dynamic forms with FormArray #
The next example will show how to build dynamic forms. We will create a mailing list which will allow adding new email and basic validation.
Model
The model is pretty simple.
class MailingList {
final List<String?> emailList;
MailingList({
this.emailList = const [],
});
}
Annotation
The next step is to add annotations to help generator do his job.
import 'package:example/helpers.dart';
import 'package:reactive_forms_annotations/reactive_forms_annotations.dart';
@Rf()
class MailingList {
final List<String?> emailList;
MailingList({
@RfArray(
validators: const [
MailingListValidator(),
],
) this.emailList = const [],
});
}
ReactiveFormAnnotation
- tells the generator that we want to Form based on this model.
FormArrayAnnotation
- maps fields to control elements.
Validation
The mailing list form should not be valid in two cases - if there are duplicates and if any field is invalid email.
class MailingListValidator extends Validator<dynamic> {
const MailingListValidator() : super();
@override
Map<String, dynamic>? validate(AbstractControl control) {
final formArray = control as FormArray<String>;
final emails = formArray.value ?? [];
final test = <String>{};
final result = emails.fold<bool>(true,
(previousValue, element) => previousValue && test.add(element ?? ''));
return result ? null : <String, dynamic>{'emailDuplicates': true};
}
}
As far as we are using annotations - validators should be top level functions or static class fields.
Now we are ready to run our form generator.
Form
Let's build our form based on generated code
// create form based on generated widget
final form = MailingListFormBuilder(
// instantiate with empty model
model: MailingList(),
builder: (context, formModel, child) {
return Column(
crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.start,
children: [
Row(
children: [
Expanded(
// renders list of fields corresponding to added elements
child: ReactiveFormArray<String>(
formArray: formModel.emailListControl,
builder: (context, formArray, child) =>
Column(
children: formModel.emailListValue
.asMap()
.map((i, email) {
return MapEntry(
i,
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControlName: i.toString(),
validationMessages: {
'email': (_) => 'Invalid email',
},
decoration: InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Email ${i}'),
));
})
.values
.toList(),
),
),
),
SizedBox(width: 16),
// adds new item to the list of fields
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () {
// add****Item function allows you not only to add values but also alter the FormControl parameters if needed
// you can change
// - validators,
// - asyncValidators,
// - asyncValidatorsDebounceTime,
// - disabled,
// validatorsApplyMode - controls how the validators will be applied
// - merge - will append to the validators defined in annotation
// - override - will override to the validators defined in annotation
formModel.addEmailListItem('');
},
child: const Text('add'),
)
],
),
SizedBox(height: 16),
// renders error related to the whole list of elements
ReactiveMailingListFormConsumer(
builder: (context, form, child) {
// map error keys to text
final errorText = {
'emailDuplicates': 'Two identical emails are in the list',
};
final errors = <String, dynamic>{};
// filter values related to individual text fields
form.emailListControl.errors.forEach((key, value) {
final intKey = int.tryParse(key);
if (intKey == null) {
errors[key] = value;
}
});
// if there is still erros left - render an error message
if (form.emailListControl.hasErrors && errors.isNotEmpty) {
return Text(errorText[errors.entries.first.key] ?? '');
} else {
return Container();
}
},
),
SizedBox(height: 16),
Column(
crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.stretch,
children: [
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () {
if (formModel.form.valid) {
print(formModel.model);
} else {
formModel.form.markAllAsTouched();
}
},
child: const Text('Sign Up'),
),
ReactiveMailingListFormConsumer(
builder: (context, form, child) {
return ElevatedButton(
child: Text('Submit'),
onPressed: form.form.valid ? () {} : null,
);
},
),
],
)
],
);
},
);
Nested forms with FormGroups #
The next example will show how to build nested forms. We will create a user profile form with first/last names and home/office addresses. Address will contain city/street/zip fields.
Model
The model will be separated on two parts UserProfile
and Address
class UserProfile {
final String firstName;
final String lastName;
final Address? home;
final Address? office;
UserProfile({
this.firstName = '',
this.lastName = '',
this.home,
this.office,
});
}
class Address {
final String? street;
final String? city;
final String? zip;
Address({
this.street,
this.city,
this.zip,
});
}
Annotation
The next step is to add annotations to help generator do his job.
import 'package:example/helpers.dart';
import 'package:reactive_forms_annotations/reactive_forms_annotations.dart';
@Rf()
class UserProfile {
final String firstName;
final String lastName;
final Address? home;
final Address? office;
UserProfile({
@RfControl(
validators: const [RequiredValidator()],
) this.firstName = '',
@RfControl(
validators: const [RequiredValidator()],
) this.lastName = '',
this.home,
this.office,
});
}
@RfGroup()
class Address {
final String? street;
final String? city;
final String? zip;
Address({
@RfControl() this.street,
@RfControl(
validators: const [RequiredValidator()],
) this.city,
@RfControl() this.zip,
});
}
ReactiveFormAnnotation
- tells the generator that we want to Form based on this model.
FormGroupAnnotation
- describes the nested form.
Validation
As far as we are using annotations - validators should be top level functions or static class fields.
Now we are ready to run our form generator. .
Form
Let's build our form based on generated code
// create form based on generated widget
final form = UserProfileFormBuilder(
model: UserProfile(),
builder: (context, formModel, child) {
return SingleChildScrollView(
child: Column(
crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.stretch,
children: [
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.firstNameControl,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'First name',
),
),
const SizedBox(height: 8.0),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.lastNameControl,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Last name',
),
),
const SizedBox(height: 24.0),
Text('Home address', style: TextStyle(fontSize: 18)),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.homeForm.cityControl,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Home city',
),
),
const SizedBox(height: 8.0),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.homeForm.streetControl,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Home street',
),
),
const SizedBox(height: 8.0),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.homeForm.zipControl,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
textInputAction: TextInputAction.done,
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Home zip',
),
),
const SizedBox(height: 8.0),
Text('Office address', style: TextStyle(fontSize: 18)),
const SizedBox(height: 8.0),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.officeForm.cityControl,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Office city',
),
),
const SizedBox(height: 8.0),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.officeForm.streetControl,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Office street',
),
),
const SizedBox(height: 8.0),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.officeForm.zipControl,
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Office zip',
),
),
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () {
if (formModel.form.valid) {
print(formModel.model);
} else {
formModel.form.markAllAsTouched();
}
},
child: const Text('Sign Up'),
),
ReactiveUserProfileFormConsumer(
builder: (context, form, child) {
return ElevatedButton(
child: Text('Submit'),
onPressed: form.form.valid
? () {
print(form.model.firstName);
print(form.model.lastName);
}
: null,
);
},
),
],
),
);
},
);
Nested forms with array of FormGroups #
The next example will show how to build nested forms. We will create a delivery list with simple control for name
and
form group for address
; Address will contain city/street fields.
Model
The model will be separated on three parts DeliveryList
, DeliveryPoint
and Address
class DeliveryList {
final List<DeliveryPoint> deliveryList;
DeliveryList({
this.deliveryList = const [],
});
}
class DeliveryPoint {
final String name;
final Address? address;
DeliveryPoint({
this.name = '',
this.address,
});
}
class Address {
final String? street;
final String? city;
Address({
this.street,
this.city,
});
}
Annotation
The next step is to add annotations to help generator do his job.
@Rf()
class DeliveryList {
final List<DeliveryPoint> deliveryList;
DeliveryList({
@RfArray() this.deliveryList = const [],
});
}
@RfGroup()
class DeliveryPoint {
final String name;
final Address? address;
DeliveryPoint({
@RfControl(
validators: const [RequiredValidator()],
) this.name = '',
this.address,
});
}
@RfGroup()
class Address {
final String? street;
final String? city;
Address({
@RfControl(
validators: const [RequiredValidator()],
) this.street,
@RfControl() this.city,
});
}
ReactiveFormAnnotation
- tells the generator that we want to Form based on this model.
FormGroupAnnotation
- describes the nested form.
Now we are ready to run our form generator. .
Form
Let's build our form based on generated code
// create form based on generated widget
final form = DeliveryListFormBuilder(
model: DeliveryList(),
builder: (context, formModel, child) {
return Column(
crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.start,
children: [
Row(
children: [
Expanded(
child: ReactiveFormArray<Map<String, Object?>>(
formArray: formModel.deliveryListControl,
builder: (context, formArray, child) {
return Column(
children: formModel.deliveryListValue
.asMap()
.map((i, deliveryPoint) {
return MapEntry(
i,
Column(
children: [
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControlName: '${i}.name',
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Name ${i}',
),
),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControlName:
'${i}.address.street',
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Street ${i}',
),
),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControlName: '${i}.address.city',
validationMessages: {
ValidationMessage.required: (_) => 'Must not be empty',
},
decoration: InputDecoration(
labelText: 'City ${i}',
),
),
],
));
})
.values
.toList(),
);
},
),
),
SizedBox(width: 16),
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () {
formModel.addDeliveryListItem(DeliveryPoint());
},
child: const Text('add'),
)
],
),
SizedBox(height: 16),
SizedBox(height: 16),
Column(
crossAxisAlignment: CrossAxisAlignment.stretch,
children: [
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () {
if (formModel.form.valid) {
print(formModel.model);
} else {
formModel.form.markAllAsTouched();
}
},
child: const Text('Sign Up'),
),
ReactiveDeliveryListFormConsumer(
builder: (context, form, child) {
return ElevatedButton(
child: Text('Submit'),
onPressed: form.form.valid ? () {} : null,
);
},
),
],
)
],
);
},
);
Freezed #
You can annotate models produced by Freezed with additional annotations to generate the form Read more about freezed here
First we need to define our form model
Model
@freezed
class FreezedClass with _$FreezedClass {
const factory FreezedClass({
String? id,
String? name,
double? year,
}) = _FreezedClass;
factory FreezedClass.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) =>
_$FreezedClassFromJson(json);
}
Annotation
The next step is to add annotations to help generator do his job.
import 'package:reactive_forms_annotations/reactive_forms_annotations.dart';
import 'package:freezed_annotation/freezed_annotation.dart';
part 'freezed_class.g.dart';
part 'freezed_class.freezed.dart';
@freezed
@Rf()
class FreezedClass
with _$FreezedClass {
const factory FreezedClass({
@RfControl() String? id,
@RfControl() String? name,
@RfControl() double? year,
}) = _FreezedClass;
factory FreezedClass.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) =>
_$FreezedClassFromJson(json);
}
Validation
You can add validations the same way as in basics example
Form
Let's build our form based on generated code
final form = FreezedClassFormBuilder(
model: FreezedClass(),
builder: (context, formModel, child) {
return Column(
children: [
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.idControl,
textInputAction: TextInputAction.next,
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'ID',
helperText: '',
helperStyle: TextStyle(height: 0.7),
errorStyle: TextStyle(height: 0.7),
),
),
const SizedBox(height: 16.0),
ReactiveTextField<String>(
formControl: formModel.nameControl,
textInputAction: TextInputAction.done,
decoration: const InputDecoration(
labelText: 'Name',
helperText: '',
helperStyle: TextStyle(height: 0.7),
errorStyle: TextStyle(height: 0.7),
),
),
const SizedBox(height: 16.0),
ReactiveSlider(
formControl: formModel.yearControl,
min: 1900,
max: 2100,
),
ElevatedButton(
onPressed: () {
if (formModel.form.valid) {
print(formModel.model);
print(formModel.model.year);
} else {
formModel.form.markAllAsTouched();
}
},
child: const Text('Sign Up'),
),
ReactiveFreezedClassFormConsumer(
builder: (context, formModel, child) {
return ElevatedButton(
child: Text('Submit'),
onPressed: formModel.form.valid ? () {} : null,
);
},
),
],
);
},
);
Subforms #
There could be the case when some of your nested entities will have to have their own subform with subset of fields. Let's refer to our previous example of Nested forms with array of FormGroups
We used DeliveryPoint
entity to create a list for points for delivery.
If you want to have the set of form classes to be generated for DeliveryPoint
just add and
additional ReactiveFormAnnotation
annotation
@Rf()
@RfGroup()
class DeliveryPoint {
final String name;
final Address? address;
DeliveryPoint({
@RfControl(
validators: const [RequiredValidator()],
) this.name = '',
this.address,
});
}
Animated list #
Check
the Animated URL list
form sample to see how to deal with forms utilizing AnimatedList
.
There is a small trick which requires passing down the FormControl
elements due to the fact
that we need to provide same widget to animate removal while actual form item is missing in form.