Provided by: libcatalyst-manual-perl_5.9009-1_all bug

NAME

       Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::09_AdvancedCRUD::09_FormFu - Catalyst Tutorial - Chapter 9:
       Advanced CRUD - FormFu

OVERVIEW

       This is Chapter 9 of 10 for the Catalyst tutorial.

       Tutorial Overview

       1.  Introduction

       2.  Catalyst Basics

       3.  More Catalyst Basics

       4.  Basic CRUD

       5.  Authentication

       6.  Authorization

       7.  Debugging

       8.  Testing

       9.  09_Advanced CRUD::09_FormFu

       10. Appendices

DESCRIPTION

       This portion of the tutorial explores HTML::FormFu and how it can be used to manage forms,
       perform validation of form input, as well as save and restore data to/from the database.

       See Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::09_AdvancedCRUD for additional form management options
       other than HTML::FormFu.

       Source code for the tutorial in included in the /home/catalyst/Final directory of the
       Tutorial Virtual machine (one subdirectory per chapter).  There are also instructions for
       downloading the code in Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::01_Intro.

HTML::FormFu FORM CREATION

       This section looks at how HTML::FormFu can be used to add additional functionality to the
       manually created form from Chapter 4.

   Inherit From Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu
       First, change your "lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm" to inherit from
       Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu by changing the "extends" line from the default of:

           BEGIN {extends 'Catalyst::Controller'; }

       to use the FormFu base controller class:

           BEGIN {extends 'Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu'; }

       Don't forget to add:

           requires 'HTML::FormFu';
           requires 'Catalyst::Controller::HTML::FormFu';
           requires 'requires 'HTML::FormFu::Model::DBIC';';

       to your "Makefile.PL".

   Add Action to Display and Save the Form
       Open "lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm" in your editor and add the following method:

           =head2 formfu_create

           Use HTML::FormFu to create a new book

           =cut

           sub formfu_create :Chained('base') :PathPart('formfu_create') :Args(0) :FormConfig {
               my ($self, $c) = @_;

               # Get the form that the :FormConfig attribute saved in the stash
               my $form = $c->stash->{form};

               # Check if the form has been submitted (vs. displaying the initial
               # form) and if the data passed validation.  "submitted_and_valid"
               # is shorthand for "$form->submitted && !$form->has_errors"
               if ($form->submitted_and_valid) {
                   # Create a new book
                   my $book = $c->model('DB::Book')->new_result({});
                   # Save the form data for the book
                   $form->model->update($book);
                   # Set a status message for the user & return to books list
                   $c->response->redirect($c->uri_for($self->action_for('list'),
                       {mid => $c->set_status_msg("Book created")}));
                   $c->detach;
               } else {
                   # Get the authors from the DB
                   my @author_objs = $c->model("DB::Author")->all();
                   # Create an array of arrayrefs where each arrayref is an author
                   my @authors;
                   foreach (sort {$a->last_name cmp $b->last_name} @author_objs) {
                       push(@authors, [$_->id, $_->last_name]);
                   }
                   # Get the select added by the config file
                   my $select = $form->get_element({type => 'Select'});
                   # Add the authors to it
                   $select->options(\@authors);
               }

               # Set the template
               $c->stash(template => 'books/formfu_create.tt2');
           }

   Create a Form Config File
       Although "HTML::FormFu" supports any configuration file handled by Config::Any, most
       people tend to use YAML.  First create a directory to hold your form configuration files:

           $ mkdir -p root/forms/books

       Then create the file "root/forms/books/formfu_create.yml" and enter the following text:

           ---
           # indicator is the field that is used to test for form submission
           indicator: submit
           # Start listing the form elements
           elements:
               # The first element will be a text field for the title
               - type: Text
                 name: title
                 label: Title
                 # This is an optional 'mouse over' title pop-up
                 attributes:
                   title: Enter a book title here

               # Another text field for the numeric rating
               - type: Text
                 name: rating
                 label: Rating
                 attributes:
                   title: Enter a rating between 1 and 5 here

               # Add a drop-down list for the author selection.  Note that we will
               # dynamically fill in all the authors from the controller but we
               # could manually set items in the drop-list by adding this YAML code:
               # options:
               #   - [ '1', 'Bastien' ]
               #   - [ '2', 'Nasseh'  ]
               - type: Select
                 name: authors
                 label: Author

               # The submit button
               - type: Submit
                 name: submit
                 value: Submit

       NOTE: Copying and pasting YAML from Perl documentation is sometimes tricky.  See the
       "Config::General Config for this tutorial" section of this document for a more foolproof
       config format.

   Update the CSS
       Edit "root/static/css/main.css" and add the following lines to the bottom of the file:

           ...
           input {
               display: block;
           }
           select {
               display: block;
           }
           .submit {
               padding-top: .5em;
               display: block;
           }

       These changes will display form elements vertically.

   Create a Template Page To Display The Form
       Open "root/src/books/formfu_create.tt2" in your editor and enter the following:

           [% META title = 'Create/Update Book' %]

           [%# Render the HTML::FormFu Form %]
           [% form %]

           <p><a href="[% c.uri_for(c.controller.action_for('list'))
               %]">Return to book list</a></p>

   Add Links for Create and Update via "HTML::FormFu"
       Open "root/src/books/list.tt2" in your editor and add the following to the bottom of the
       existing file:

           ...
           <p>
             HTML::FormFu:
             <a href="[% c.uri_for(c.controller.action_for('formfu_create')) %]">Create</a>
           </p>

       This adds a new link to the bottom of the book list page that we can use to easily launch
       our HTML::FormFu-based form.

   Test The HTML::FormFu Create Form
       Make sure the server is running with the "-r" restart option:

           $ script/myapp_server.pl -r

       Login as "test01" (password: mypass).  Once at the Book List page, click the new
       HTML::FormFu "Create" link at the bottom to display the form.  Fill in the following
       values:

           Title:  Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol. II
           Rating: 4
           Author: Comer

       Click the "Submit" button, and you will be returned to the Book List page with a "Book
       created" status message displayed.

       Also note that this implementation allows you to create books with any bogus information.
       Although we have constrained the authors with the drop-down list (note that this isn't
       bulletproof because we still have not prevented a user from "hacking" the form to specify
       other values), there are no restrictions on items such as the length of the title (for
       example, you can create a one-letter title) and the value of the rating (you can use any
       number you want, and even non-numeric values with SQLite).  The next section will address
       this concern.

       Note: Depending on the database you are using and how you established the columns in your
       tables, the database could obviously provide various levels of "type enforcement" on your
       data.  The key point being made in the previous paragraph is that the web application
       itself is not performing any validation.

HTML::FormFu VALIDATION AND FILTERING

       Although the use of HTML::FormFu in the previous section did provide an automated
       mechanism to build the form, the real power of this module stems from functionality that
       can automatically validate and filter the user input.  Validation uses constraints to be
       sure that users input appropriate data (for example, that the email field of a form
       contains a valid email address).  Filtering can also be used to remove extraneous
       whitespace from fields or to escape meta-characters in user input.

   Add Constraints
       Open "root/forms/books/formfu_create.yml" in your editor and update it to match:

           ---
           # indicator is the field that is used to test for form submission
           indicator: submit
           # Start listing the form elements
           elements:
               # The first element will be a text field for the title
               - type: Text
                 name: title
                 label: Title
                 # This is an optional 'mouse over' title pop-up
                 attributes:
                   title: Enter a book title here
                 # Add constraints for the field
                 constraints:
                   # Force the length to be between 5 and 40 chars
                   - type: Length
                     min: 5
                     max: 40
                     # Override the default of 'Invalid input'
                     message: Length must be between 5 and 40 characters

               # Another text field for the numeric rating
               - type: Text
                 name: rating
                 label: Rating
                 attributes:
                   title: Enter a rating between 1 and 5 here
                 # Use Filter to clean up the input data
                 # Could use 'NonNumeric' below, but since Filters apply *before*
                 # constraints, it would conflict with the 'Integer' constraint below.
                 # So let's skip this and just use the constraint.
                 #filter:
                   # Remove everything except digits
                   #- NonNumeric
                 # Add constraints to the field
                 constraints:
                   # Make sure it's a number
                   - type: Integer
                     message: "Required. Digits only, please."
                   # Check the min & max values
                   - type: Range
                     min: 1
                     max: 5
                     message: "Must be between 1 and 5."

               # Add a select list for the author selection.  Note that we will
               # dynamically fill in all the authors from the controller but we
               # could manually set items in the select by adding this YAML code:
               # options:
               #   - [ '1', 'Bastien' ]
               #   - [ '2', 'Nasseh'  ]
               - type: Select
                 name: authors
                 label: Author
                 # Convert the drop-down to a multi-select list
                 multiple: 1
                 # Display 3 entries (user can scroll to see others)
                 size: 3
                 # One could argue we don't need to do filters or constraints for
                 # a select list, but it's smart to do validation and sanity
                 # checks on this data in case a user "hacks" the input
                 # Add constraints to the field
                 constraints:
                   # Make sure it's a number
                   - Integer

               # The submit button
               - type: Submit
                 name: submit
                 value: Submit

           # Global filters and constraints.
           constraints:
               # The user cannot leave any fields blank
               - Required
               # If not all fields are required, move the Required constraint to the
               # fields that are
           filter:
               # Remove whitespace at both ends
               - TrimEdges
               # Escape HTML characters for safety
               - HTMLEscape

       NOTE: Copying and pasting YAML from Perl documentation is sometimes tricky.  See the
       "Config::General Config for this tutorial" section of this document for a more foolproof
       config format.

       The main changes are:

       •   The "Select" element for "authors" is changed from a single-select drop-down to a
           multi-select list by adding configuration for the "multiple" and "size" options in
           "formfu_create.yml".

       •   Constraints are added to provide validation of the user input.  See
           HTML::FormFu::Constraint for other constraints that are available.

       •   A variety of filters are run on every field to remove and escape unwanted input.  See
           HTML::FormFu::Filter for more filter options.

   Try Out the Updated Form
       Make sure you are still logged in as "test01" and try adding a book with various errors:
       title less than 5 characters, non-numeric rating, a rating of 0 or 6, etc.  Also try
       selecting one, two, and zero authors.  When you click Submit, the HTML::FormFu
       "constraint" items will validate the logic and insert feedback as appropriate.  Try adding
       blank spaces at the front or the back of the title and note that it will be removed.

       Note that you can update your FormFu YAML forms and the development server does not need
       to reload -- the form definition is read from the YAML file each time a controller action
       uses it.

CREATE AND UPDATE/EDIT ACTION

       Let's expand the work done above to add an edit action.  First, open
       "lib/MyApp/Controller/Books.pm" and add the following method to the bottom:

           =head2 formfu_edit

           Use HTML::FormFu to update an existing book

           =cut

           sub formfu_edit :Chained('object') :PathPart('formfu_edit') :Args(0)
                   :FormConfig('books/formfu_create.yml') {
               my ($self, $c) = @_;

               # Get the specified book already saved by the 'object' method
               my $book = $c->stash->{object};

               # Make sure we were able to get a book
               unless ($book) {
                   # Set an error message for the user & return to books list
                   $c->response->redirect($c->uri_for($self->action_for('list'),
                       {mid => $c->set_error_msg("Invalid book -- Cannot edit")}));
                   $c->detach;
               }

               # Get the form that the :FormConfig attribute saved in the stash
               my $form = $c->stash->{form};

               # Check if the form has been submitted (vs. displaying the initial
               # form) and if the data passed validation.  "submitted_and_valid"
               # is shorthand for "$form->submitted && !$form->has_errors"
               if ($form->submitted_and_valid) {
                   # Save the form data for the book
                   $form->model->update($book);
                   # Set a status message for the user
                   # Set a status message for the user & return to books list
                   $c->response->redirect($c->uri_for($self->action_for('list'),
                       {mid => $c->set_status_msg("Book edited")}));
                   $c->detach;
               } else {
                   # Get the authors from the DB
                   my @author_objs = $c->model("DB::Author")->all();
                   # Create an array of arrayrefs where each arrayref is an author
                   my @authors;
                   foreach (sort {$a->last_name cmp $b->last_name} @author_objs) {
                       push(@authors, [$_->id, $_->last_name]);
                   }
                   # Get the select added by the config file
                   my $select = $form->get_element({type => 'Select'});
                   # Add the authors to it
                   $select->options(\@authors);
                   # Populate the form with existing values from DB
                   $form->model->default_values($book);
               }

               # Set the template
               $c->stash(template => 'books/formfu_create.tt2');
           }

       Most of this code should look familiar to what we used in the "formfu_create" method (in
       fact, we should probably centralize some of the common code in separate methods).  The
       main differences are:

       •   We have to manually specify the name of the FormFu .yml file as an argument to
           ":FormConfig" because the name can no longer be automatically deduced from the name of
           our action/method (by default, FormFu would look for a file named
           "books/formfu_edit.yml").

       •   We load the book object from the stash (found using the $id passed to the Chained
           object method)

       •   We use $id to look up the existing book from the database.

       •   We make sure the book lookup returned a valid book.  If not, we set the error message
           and return to the book list.

       •   If the form has been submitted and passes validation, we skip creating a new book and
           just use "$form->model->update" to update the existing book.

       •   If the form is being displayed for the first time (or has failed validation and it
           being redisplayed), we use "$form->model->default_values" to populate the form with
           data from the database.

       Then, edit "root/src/books/list.tt2" and add a new link below the existing "Delete" link
       that allows us to edit/update each existing book.  The last <td> cell in the book list
       table should look like the following:

           ...
           <td>
             [% # Add a link to delete a book %]
             <a href="[%
               c.uri_for(c.controller.action_for('delete'), [book.id]) %]">Delete</a>
             [% # Add a link to edit a book %]
             <a href="[%
               c.uri_for(c.controller.action_for('formfu_edit'), [book.id]) %]">Edit</a>
           </td>
           ...

       Note: Only add three lines (the "Add a link to edit a book" comment and the href for
       "formfu_edit").  Make sure you add it below the existing "delete" link.

   Try Out the Edit/Update Feature
       Make sure you are still logged in as "test01" and go to the
       <http://localhost:3000/books/list> URL in your browser.  Click the "Edit" link next to
       "Internetworking with TCP/IP Vol. II", change the rating to a 3, the "II" at end of the
       title to the number "2", add Stevens as a co-author (control-click), and click Submit.
       You will then be returned to the book list with a "Book edited" message at the top in
       green.  Experiment with other edits to various books.

   More Things to Try
       You are now armed with enough knowledge to be dangerous.  You can keep tweaking the
       example application; some things you might want to do:

       •   Add an appropriate authorization check to the new Edit function.

       •   Cleanup the List page so that the Login link only displays when the user isn't logged
           in and the Logout link only displays when a user is logged in.

       •   Add a more sensible policy for when and how users and admins can do things in the CRUD
           cycle.

       •   Support the CRUD cycle for authors.

       Or you can proceed to write your own application, which is probably the real reason you
       worked through this Tutorial in the first place.

   Config::General Config for this tutorial
       If you are having difficulty with YAML config above, please save the below into the file
       "formfu_create.conf" and delete the "formfu_create.yml" file.  The below is in
       Config::General format which follows the syntax of Apache config files.

          constraints   Required
          <elements>
              <constraints>
                  min   5
                  max   40
                  type   Length
                  message   Length must be between 5 and 40 characters
              </constraints>
              filter   TrimEdges
              filter   HTMLEscape
              name   title
              type   Text
              label   Title
              <attributes>
                  title   Enter a book title here
              </attributes>
          </elements>
          <elements>
              constraints   Integer
              filter   TrimEdges
              filter   NonNumeric
              name   rating
              type   Text
              label   Rating
              <attributes>
                  title   Enter a rating between 1 and 5 here
              </attributes>
          </elements>
          <elements>
              constraints   Integer
              filter   TrimEdges
              filter   HTMLEscape
              name   authors
              type   Select
              label   Author
              multiple   1
              size   3
          </elements>
          <elements>
              value   Submit
              name   submit
              type   Submit
          </elements>
          indicator   submit

AUTHOR

       Kennedy Clark, "hkclark@gmail.com"

       Feel free to contact the author for any errors or suggestions, but the best way to report
       issues is via the CPAN RT Bug system at
       <https://rt.cpan.org/Public/Dist/Display.html?Name=Catalyst-Manual>.

       Copyright 2006-2011, Kennedy Clark, under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike
       License Version 3.0 (<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/us/>).

perl v5.20.2                          Catalyst::Manual::Tutorial::09_AdvancedCRUD::09_FormFu(3pm)