This module allows you to create reusable forms that are self contained. You can tie it to a ORM model, or roll your own.
The bundled view templates are marked up to work out of the box with the Bootstrap CSS toolkit from Twitter, but you can override these and use your own markup as needed.
Once you've created your form class (see below), you can display it with:
<?php
$form = new Form_Login();
echo $form->render();
You'll likely want to pass the form into the view where you can call ->render() or assign the result of ->render() to a view variable.
<?php
class Form_Login extends FormManager {
protected function setup() {
$this->add_field('username');
$this->add_field('password', array('display_as' => 'password');
$this->rule('username', 'not_empty');
$this->rule('password', 'not_empty');
}
public function submit() {
$success = parent::submit();
if (!success) return false;
$values = $this->get_input();
$auth = Auth::instance();
$success = $auth->login($values['username'], $values['password']);
if (!$success) {
$this->values['username']['error'] = true;
$this->values['username']['error_text'] = 'Your username or password were not recognised.';
}
}
}
The basics of what you require to create a form for a model is
<?php
class Form_Profile extends FormManager {
protected $model = 'user';
}
However you're likely to want to tweak the form a bit, and do something with the data that's submitted.
<?php
class Form_Profile extends FormManager {
protected $model = 'user';
// These fields are irrelevant in the form
protected $exclude_fields = array('logins', 'last_login');
protected function setup() {
$this->add_field('password_confirm', array('display_as' => 'password'), 'after', 'password');
$this->fields['password']['display_as'] = 'password';
$this->rule('password_confirm', 'matches', array(':validation', 'password', ':field'));
$this->set_value('password', '');
$this->set_value('password_confirm', '');
}
public function submit() {
// Ensure current user has permissions to edit
$auth = Auth::instance();
$user = $auth->get_user();
if ($user->id != $this->object->id) {
return false;
}
$success = parent::submit();
if ($success) {
$this->save_object();
}
return $success;
}
}
Note; the FormManager class does not automatically call ->save_object() during ->submit().
- Refactor or rewrite. I've tacked things on as I've gone and it's getting a bit unwieldy. Need to get all the additional features in there in a more logical form.
- Documentation!