HTML form construction¶
CubicWeb provides the somewhat usual form / field / widget / renderer abstraction to provide generic building blocks which will greatly help you in building forms properly integrated with CubicWeb (coherent display, error handling, etc…), while keeping things as flexible as possible.
A form
basically only holds a set of fields
, and has te be bound to a
renderer
which is responsible to layout them. Each field is bound to a
widget
that will be used to fill in value(s) for that field (at form
generation time) and ‘decode’ (fetch and give a proper Python type to) values
sent back by the browser.
The field
should be used according to the type of what you want to edit.
E.g. if you want to edit some date, you’ll have to use the
cubicweb.web.formfields.DateField
. Then you can choose among multiple
widgets to edit it, for instance cubicweb.web.formwidgets.TextInput
(a
bare text field), DateTimePicker
(a simple
calendar) or even JQueryDatePicker
(the JQuery
calendar). You can of course also write your own widget.
Exploring the available forms¶
A small excursion into a CubicWeb shell is the quickest way to discover available forms (or application objects in general).
>>> from pprint import pprint
>>> pprint( session.vreg['forms'] )
{'base': [<class 'cubicweb.web.views.forms.FieldsForm'>,
<class 'cubicweb.web.views.forms.EntityFieldsForm'>],
'changestate': [<class 'cubicweb.web.views.workflow.ChangeStateForm'>,
<class 'cubicweb_tracker.views.forms.VersionChangeStateForm'>],
'composite': [<class 'cubicweb.web.views.forms.CompositeForm'>,
<class 'cubicweb.web.views.forms.CompositeEntityForm'>],
'deleteconf': [<class 'cubicweb.web.views.editforms.DeleteConfForm'>],
'edition': [<class 'cubicweb.web.views.autoform.AutomaticEntityForm'>,
<class 'cubicweb.web.views.workflow.TransitionEditionForm'>,
<class 'cubicweb.web.views.workflow.StateEditionForm'>],
'logform': [<class 'cubicweb.web.views.basetemplates.LogForm'>],
'massmailing': [<class 'cubicweb.web.views.massmailing.MassMailingForm'>],
'muledit': [<class 'cubicweb.web.views.editforms.TableEditForm'>],
'sparql': [<class 'cubicweb.web.views.sparql.SparqlForm'>]}
The two most important form families here (for all practical purposes) are base
and edition. Most of the time one wants alterations of the
AutomaticEntityForm
to generate custom forms to handle edition of an
entity.
The Automatic Entity Form¶
-
class
cubicweb.web.views.autoform.
AutomaticEntityForm
(*args, **kwargs)[source]¶ AutomaticEntityForm is an automagic form to edit any entity. It is designed to be fully generated from schema but highly configurable through uicfg.
Of course, as for other forms, you can also customise it by specifying various standard form parameters on selection, overriding, or adding/removing fields in selected instances.
Configuration through uicfg¶
It is possible to manage which and how an entity’s attributes and relations will be edited in the various contexts where the automatic entity form is used by using proper uicfg tags.
The details of the uicfg syntax can be found in the The uicfg module chapter.
Possible relation tags that apply to entity forms are detailled below.
They are all in the cubicweb.web.uicfg
module.
Attributes/relations display location¶
autoform_section
specifies where to display a relation in form for a given
form type. tag_attribute()
, tag_subject_of()
and
tag_object_of()
methods for this relation tag expect two arguments
additionally to the relation key: a formtype and a section.
formtype may be one of:
- ‘main’, the main entity form (e.g. the one you get when creating or editing an entity)
- ‘inlined’, the form for an entity inlined into another form
- ‘muledit’, the table form when editing multiple entities of the same type
section may be one of:
- ‘hidden’, don’t display (not even in a hidden input)
- ‘attributes’, display in the attributes section
- ‘relations’, display in the relations section, using the generic relation selector combobox (available in main form only, and not usable for attributes)
- ‘inlined’, display target entity of the relation into an inlined form (available in main form only, and not for attributes)
By default, mandatory relations are displayed in the ‘attributes’ section, others in ‘relations’ section.
Change default fields¶
Use autoform_field
to replace the default field class to use for a relation
or attribute. You can put either a field class or instance as value (put a class
whenether it’s possible).
Warning
autoform_field_kwargs should usually be used instead of autoform_field. If you put a field instance into autoform_field, autoform_field_kwargs values for this relation will be ignored.
Customize field options¶
In order to customize field options (see Field
for a detailed list of options), use autoform_field_kwargs. This rtag takes
a dictionary as arguments, that will be given to the field’s contructor.
You can then put in that dictionary any arguments supported by the field class. For instance:
# Change the content of the combobox. Here `ticket_done_in_choices` is a
# function which returns a list of elements to populate the combobox
autoform_field_kwargs.tag_subject_of(('Ticket', 'done_in', '*'),
{'sort': False,
'choices': ticket_done_in_choices})
# Force usage of a TextInput widget for the expression attribute of
# RQLExpression entities
autoform_field_kwargs.tag_attribute(('RQLExpression', 'expression'),
{'widget': fw.TextInput})
Note
the widget argument can be either a class or an instance (the later case being convenient to pass the Widget specific initialisation options)
Overriding permissions¶
The autoform_permissions_overrides rtag provides a way to by-pass security checking for dark-corner case where it can’t be verified properly.
Anatomy of a choices function¶
Let’s have a look at the ticket_done_in_choices function given to the choices parameter of the relation tag that is applied to the (‘Ticket’, ‘done_in’, ‘*’) relation definition, as it is both typical and sophisticated enough. This is a code snippet from the tracker cube.
The Ticket
entity type can be related to a Project
and a
Version
, respectively through the concerns
and done_in
relations. When a user is about to edit a ticket, we want to fill the
combo box for the done_in
relation with values pertinent with
respect to the context. The important context here is:
- creation or modification (we cannot fetch values the same way in either case)
__linkto
url parameter given in a creation context
from cubicweb.web import formfields
def ticket_done_in_choices(form, field):
entity = form.edited_entity
# first see if its specified by __linkto form parameters
linkedto = form.linked_to[('done_in', 'subject')]
if linkedto:
return linkedto
# it isn't, get initial values
vocab = field.relvoc_init(form)
veid = None
# try to fetch the (already or pending) related version and project
if not entity.has_eid():
peids = form.linked_to[('concerns', 'subject')]
peid = peids and peids[0]
else:
peid = entity.project.eid
veid = entity.done_in and entity.done_in[0].eid
if peid:
# we can complete the vocabulary with relevant values
rschema = form._cw.vreg.schema['done_in'].rdef('Ticket', 'Version')
rset = form._cw.execute(
'Any V, VN ORDERBY version_sort_value(VN) '
'WHERE V version_of P, P eid %(p)s, V num VN, '
'V in_state ST, NOT ST name "published"', {'p': peid}, 'p')
vocab += [(v.view('combobox'), v.eid) for v in rset.entities()
if rschema.has_perm(form._cw, 'add', toeid=v.eid)
and v.eid != veid]
return vocab
The first thing we have to do is fetch potential values from the __linkto
url
parameter that is often found in entity creation contexts (the creation action
provides such a parameter with a predetermined value; for instance in this case,
ticket creation could occur in the context of a Version entity). The
RelationField
field class provides a
relvoc_linkedto()
method that gets a
list suitably filled with vocabulary values.
linkedto = field.relvoc_linkedto(form)
if linkedto:
return linkedto
Then, if no __linkto
argument was given, we must prepare the vocabulary with
an initial empty value (because done_in is not mandatory, we must allow the
user to not select a verson) and already linked values. This is done with the
relvoc_init()
method.
vocab = field.relvoc_init(form)
But then, we have to give more: if the ticket is related to a project, we should provide all the non published versions of this project (Version and Project can be related through the version_of relation). Conversely, if we do not know yet the project, it would not make sense to propose all existing versions as it could potentially lead to incoherences. Even if these will be caught by some RQLConstraint, it is wise not to tempt the user with error-inducing candidate values.
The “ticket is related to a project” part must be decomposed as:
- this is a new ticket which is created is the context of a project
- this is an already existing ticket, linked to a project (through the concerns relation)
- there is no related project (quite unlikely given the cardinality of
the concerns relation, so it can only mean that we are creating a
new ticket, and a project is about to be selected but there is no
__linkto
argument)
Note
the last situation could happen in several ways, but of course in a polished application, the paths to ticket creation should be controlled so as to avoid a suboptimal end-user experience
Hence, we try to fetch the related project.
veid = None
if not entity.has_eid():
peids = form.linked_to[('concerns', 'subject')]
peid = peids and peids[0]
else:
peid = entity.project.eid
veid = entity.done_in and entity.done_in[0].eid
We distinguish between entity creation and entity modification using
the Entity.has_eid()
method, which returns False on creation. At
creation time the only way to get a project is through the
__linkto
parameter. Notice that we fetch the version in which the
ticket is done_in if any, for later.
Note
the implementation above assumes that if there is a __linkto
parameter, it is only about a project. While it makes sense most of
the time, it is not an absolute. Depending on how an entity creation
action action url is built, several outcomes could be possible
there
If the ticket is already linked to a project, fetching it is trivial. Then we add the relevant version to the initial vocabulary.
if peid:
rschema = form._cw.vreg.schema['done_in'].rdef('Ticket', 'Version')
rset = form._cw.execute(
'Any V, VN ORDERBY version_sort_value(VN) '
'WHERE V version_of P, P eid %(p)s, V num VN, '
'V in_state ST, NOT ST name "published"', {'p': peid})
vocab += [(v.view('combobox'), v.eid) for v in rset.entities()
if rschema.has_perm(form._cw, 'add', toeid=v.eid)
and v.eid != veid]
Warning
we have to defend ourselves against lack of a project eid. Given the cardinality of the concerns relation, there must be a project, but this rule can only be enforced at validation time, which will happen of course only after form subsmission
Here, given a project eid, we complete the vocabulary with all unpublished versions defined in the project (sorted by number) for which the current user is allowed to establish the relation.
Building self-posted form with custom fields/widgets¶
Sometimes you want a form that is not related to entity edition. For those, you’ll have to handle form posting by yourself. Here is a complete example on how to achieve this (and more).
Imagine you want a form that selects a month period. There are no proper field/widget to handle this in CubicWeb, so let’s start by defining them:
# let's have the whole import list at the beginning, even those necessary for
# subsequent snippets
from logilab.common import date
from logilab.mtconverter import xml_escape
from cubicweb.view import View
from cubicweb.predicates import match_kwargs
from cubicweb.web import RequestError, ProcessFormError
from cubicweb.web import formfields as fields, formwidgets as wdgs
from cubicweb.web.views import forms, calendar
class MonthSelect(wdgs.Select):
"""Custom widget to display month and year. Expect value to be given as a
date instance.
"""
def format_value(self, form, field, value):
return u'%s/%s' % (value.year, value.month)
def process_field_data(self, form, field):
val = super(MonthSelect, self).process_field_data(form, field)
try:
year, month = val.split('/')
year = int(year)
month = int(month)
return date.date(year, month, 1)
except ValueError:
raise ProcessFormError(
form._cw._('badly formated date string %s') % val)
class MonthPeriodField(fields.CompoundField):
"""custom field composed of two subfields, 'begin_month' and 'end_month'.
It expects to be used on form that has 'mindate' and 'maxdate' in its
extra arguments, telling the range of month to display.
"""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
kwargs.setdefault('widget', wdgs.IntervalWidget())
super(MonthPeriodField, self).__init__(
[fields.StringField(name='begin_month',
choices=self.get_range, sort=False,
value=self.get_mindate,
widget=MonthSelect()),
fields.StringField(name='end_month',
choices=self.get_range, sort=False,
value=self.get_maxdate,
widget=MonthSelect())], *args, **kwargs)
@staticmethod
def get_range(form, field):
mindate = date.todate(form.cw_extra_kwargs['mindate'])
maxdate = date.todate(form.cw_extra_kwargs['maxdate'])
assert mindate <= maxdate
_ = form._cw._
months = []
while mindate <= maxdate:
label = '%s %s' % (_(calendar.MONTHNAMES[mindate.month - 1]),
mindate.year)
value = field.widget.format_value(form, field, mindate)
months.append( (label, value) )
mindate = date.next_month(mindate)
return months
@staticmethod
def get_mindate(form, field):
return form.cw_extra_kwargs['mindate']
@staticmethod
def get_maxdate(form, field):
return form.cw_extra_kwargs['maxdate']
def process_posted(self, form):
for field, value in super(MonthPeriodField, self).process_posted(form):
if field.name == 'end_month':
value = date.last_day(value)
yield field, value
Here we first define a widget that will be used to select the beginning and the end of the period, displaying months like ‘<month> YYYY’ but using ‘YYYY/mm’ as actual value.
We then define a field that will actually hold two fields, one for the beginning
and another for the end of the period. Each subfield uses the widget we defined
earlier, and the outer field itself uses the standard
IntervalWidget
. The field adds some logic:
- a vocabulary generation function get_range, used to populate each sub-field
- two ‘value’ functions get_mindate and get_maxdate, used to tell to subfields which value they should consider on form initialization
- overriding of process_posted, called when the form is being posted, so that the end of the period is properly set to the last day of the month.
Now, we can define a very simple form:
class MonthPeriodSelectorForm(forms.FieldsForm):
__regid__ = 'myform'
__select__ = match_kwargs('mindate', 'maxdate')
form_buttons = [wdgs.SubmitButton()]
form_renderer_id = 'onerowtable'
period = MonthPeriodField()
where we simply add our field, set a submit button and use a very simple renderer (try others!). Also we specify a selector that ensures form will have arguments necessary to our field.
Now, we need a view that will wrap the form and handle post when it occurs, simply displaying posted values in the page:
class SelfPostingForm(View):
__regid__ = 'myformview'
def call(self):
mindate, maxdate = date.date(2010, 1, 1), date.date(2012, 1, 1)
form = self._cw.vreg['forms'].select(
'myform', self._cw, mindate=mindate, maxdate=maxdate, action='')
try:
posted = form.process_posted()
self.w(u'<p>posted values %s</p>' % xml_escape(repr(posted)))
except RequestError: # no specified period asked
pass
form.render(w=self.w, formvalues=self._cw.form)
Notice usage of the process_posted()
method, that will return a dictionary
of typed values (because they have been processed by the field). In our case, when
the form is posted you should see a dictionary with ‘begin_month’ and ‘end_month’
as keys with the selected dates as value (as a python date object).
APIs¶
The Field class and basic fields¶
Note
Fields are used to control what’s edited in forms. They makes the link between something to edit and its display in the form. Actual display is handled by a widget associated to the field.
Let first see the base class for fields:
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
Field
(name=None, label=<nullobject>, widget=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ This class is the abstract base class for all fields. It hold a bunch of attributes which may be used for fine control of the behaviour of a concrete field.
Attributes
All the attributes described below have sensible default value which may be overriden by named arguments given to field’s constructor.
name
- base name of the field (basestring). The actual input name is returned by
the
input_name()
method and may differ from that name (for instance if eidparam is true). id
- DOM identifier (default to the same value as name), should be unique in a form.
label
- label of the field (default to the same value as name).
help
- help message about this field.
widget
- widget associated to the field. Each field class has a default widget class which may be overriden per instance.
value
- field value. May be an actual value or a callable which should take the form and the field as argument and return a value.
choices
- static vocabulary for this field. May be a list of values, a list of (label, value) tuples or a callable which should take the form and field as arguments and return a list of values or a list of (label, value).
required
- bool flag telling if the field is required or not.
sort
- bool flag telling if the vocabulary (either static vocabulary specified in choices or dynamic vocabulary fetched from the form) should be sorted on label.
internationalizable
- bool flag telling if the vocabulary labels should be translated using the current request language.
eidparam
- bool flag telling if this field is linked to a specific entity
role
- when the field is linked to an entity attribute or relation, tells the role of the entity in the relation (eg ‘subject’ or ‘object’). If this is not an attribute or relation of the edited entity, role should be None.
fieldset
- optional fieldset to which this field belongs to
order
- key used by automatic forms to sort fields
ignore_req_params
- when true, this field won’t consider value potentially specified using request’s form parameters (eg you won’t be able to specify a value using for instance url like http://mywebsite.com/form?field=value)
Generic methods
-
input_name
(form, suffix=None)[source]¶ Return the ‘qualified name’ for this field, e.g. something suitable to use as HTML input name. You can specify a suffix that will be included in the name when widget needs several inputs.
-
dom_id
(form, suffix=None)[source]¶ Return the HTML DOM identifier for this field, e.g. something suitable to use as HTML input id. You can specify a suffix that will be included in the name when widget needs several inputs.
-
actual_fields
(form)[source]¶ Fields may be composed of other fields. For instance the
RichTextField
is containing a format field to define the text format. This method returns actual fields that should be considered for display / edition. It usually simply return self.
Form generation methods
-
form_init
(form)[source]¶ Method called at form initialization to trigger potential field initialization requiring the form instance. Do nothing by default.
-
typed_value
(form, load_bytes=False)[source]¶ Return the correctly typed value for this field in the form context.
Post handling methods
-
process_posted
(form)[source]¶ Return an iterator on (field, value) that has been posted for field returned by
actual_fields()
.
Now, you usually don’t use that class but one of the concrete field classes described below, according to what you want to edit.
Basic fields¶
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
StringField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit unicode string (String yams type). This field additionally support a max_length attribute that specify a maximum size for the string (None meaning no limit).
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be:
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
PasswordField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit password (Password yams type, encoded python string).
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
PasswordInput
.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
IntField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit integers (Int yams type). Similar to
BigIntField
but set max length when text input widget is used (the default).
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
BigIntField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit big integers (BigInt yams type). This field additionally support min and max attributes that specify a minimum and/or maximum value for the integer (None meaning no boundary).
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
TextInput
.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
FloatField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit floats (Float yams type). This field additionally support min and max attributes as the
IntField
.Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
TextInput
.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
BooleanField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit booleans (Boolean yams type).
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
Radio
with yes/no values. You can change that values by specifing choices.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
DateField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit date (Date yams type).
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
JQueryDatePicker
.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
DateTimeField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit datetime (Datetime yams type).
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
JQueryDateTimePicker
.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
TZDatetimeField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit a timezone-aware datetime (TZDatetime yams type). Note the posted values are interpreted as UTC, so you may need to convert them client-side, using some javascript in the corresponding widget.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
TimeField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit time (Time yams type).
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
JQueryTimePicker
.
Compound fields¶
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
RichTextField
[source]¶ This compound field allow edition of text (unicode string) in a particular format. It has an inner field holding the text format, that can be specified using format_field argument. If not specified one will be automaticall generated.
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
FCKEditor
or aTextArea
. according to the field’s format and to user’s preferences.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
FileField
[source]¶ This compound field allow edition of binary stream (Bytes yams type). Three inner fields may be specified:
- format_field, holding the file’s format.
- encoding_field, holding the file’s content encoding.
- name_field, holding the file’s name.
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
FileInput
. Inner fields, if any, will be added to a drop down menu at the right of the file input.
Entity specific fields and function¶
-
class
cubicweb.web.formfields.
RelationField
[source]¶ Use this field to edit a relation of an entity.
Unless explicitly specified, the widget for this field will be a
Select
.
-
cubicweb.web.formfields.
guess_field
(eschema, rschema, role='subject', req=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ This function return the most adapted field to edit the given relation (rschema) where the given entity type (eschema) is the subject or object (role).
The field is initialized according to information found in the schema, though any value can be explicitly specified using kwargs.
Widgets¶
Note
A widget is responsible for the display of a field. It may use more than one HTML input tags. When the form is posted, a widget is also reponsible to give back to the field something it can understand.
Of course you can not use any widget with any field…
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
FieldWidget
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ The abstract base class for widgets.
Attributes
Here are standard attributes of a widget, that may be set on concrete class to override default behaviours:
needs_js
- list of javascript files needed by the widget.
needs_css
- list of css files needed by the widget.
setdomid
- flag telling if HTML DOM identifier should be set on input.
suffix
- string to use a suffix when generating input, to ease usage as a sub-widgets (eg widget used by another widget)
vocabulary_widget
- flag telling if this widget expect a vocabulary
Also, widget instances takes as first argument a attrs dictionary which will be stored in the attribute of the same name. It contains HTML attributes that should be set in the widget’s input tag (though concrete classes may ignore it).
Form generation methods
-
render
(form, field, renderer=None)[source]¶ Called to render the widget for the given field in the given form. Return a unicode string containing the HTML snippet.
You will usually prefer to override the
_render()
method so you don’t have to handle addition of needed javascript / css files.
-
_render
(form, field, renderer)[source]¶ This is the method you have to implement in concrete widget classes.
-
values
(form, field)[source]¶ Return the current string values (i.e. for display in an HTML string) for the given field. This method returns a list of values since it’s suitable for all kind of widgets, some of them taking multiple values, but you’ll get a single value in the list in most cases.
Those values are searched in:
- previously submitted form values if any (on validation error)
- req.form (specified using request parameters)
- extra form values given to form.render call (specified the code generating the form)
- field’s typed value (returned by its
typed_value()
method)
Values found in 1. and 2. are expected te be already some ‘display value’ (eg a string) while those found in 3. and 4. are expected to be correctly typed value.
3 and 4 are handle by the
typed_value()
method to ease reuse in concrete classes.
-
attributes
(form, field)[source]¶ Return HTML attributes for the widget, automatically setting DOM identifier when desired (see
setdomid
attribute)
Post handling methods
HTML <input> based widgets¶
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
HiddenInput
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ Simple <input type=’hidden’> for hidden value, will return a unicode string.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
TextInput
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ Simple <input type=’text’>, will return a unicode string.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
EmailInput
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ Simple <input type=’email’>, will return a unicode string.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
PasswordSingleInput
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ Simple <input type=’password’>, will return a utf-8 encoded string.
You may prefer using the
PasswordInput
widget which handles password confirmation.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
FileInput
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ Simple <input type=’file’>, will return a tuple (name, stream) where name is the posted file name and stream a file like object containing the posted file data.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
ButtonInput
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ Simple <input type=’button’>, will return a unicode string.
If you want a global form button, look at the
Button
,SubmitButton
,ResetButton
andImgButton
below.
Other standard HTML widgets¶
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
TextArea
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ Simple <textarea>, will return a unicode string.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
Select
(attrs=None, multiple=False, **kwargs)[source]¶ Simple <select>, for field having a specific vocabulary. Will return a unicode string, or a list of unicode strings.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
CheckBox
(attrs=None, separator=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ Simple <input type=’checkbox’>, for field having a specific vocabulary. One input will be generated for each possible value.
You can specify separator using the separator constructor argument, by default <br/> is used.
Date and time widgets¶
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
DateTimePicker
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ <input type=’text’> + javascript date/time picker for date or datetime fields. Will return the date or datetime as a unicode string.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
JQueryDateTimePicker
(initialtime=None, timesteps=15, separator=':', **kwargs)[source]¶ Compound widget using
JQueryDatePicker
andJQueryTimePicker
widgets to define a date and time picker. Will return the date and time as python datetime instance.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
JQueryDatePicker
(datestr=None, min_of=None, max_of=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ Use jquery.ui.datepicker to define a date picker. Will return the date as a unicode string.
You can couple DatePickers by using the min_of and/or max_of parameters. The DatePicker identified by the value of min_of(/max_of) will force the user to choose a date anterior(/posterior) to this DatePicker.
example:
start and end are two JQueryDatePicker and start must always be before end:
affk.set_field_kwargs(etype, 'start_date', widget=JQueryDatePicker(min_of='end_date')) affk.set_field_kwargs(etype, 'end_date', widget=JQueryDatePicker(max_of='start_date'))
That way, on change of end(/start) value a new max(/min) will be set for start(/end) The invalid dates will be gray colored in the datepicker
Ajax / javascript widgets¶
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
FCKEditor
(*args, **kwargs)[source]¶ FCKEditor enabled <textarea>, will return a unicode string containing HTML formated text.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
AjaxWidget
(wdgtype, inputid=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ Simple <div> based ajax widget, requiring a wdgtype argument telling which javascript widget should be used.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
AutoCompletionWidget
(*args, **kwargs)[source]¶ <input type=’text’> based ajax widget, taking a autocomplete_initfunc argument which should specify the name of a method of the json controller. This method is expected to return allowed values for the input, that the widget will use to propose matching values as you type.
Other widgets¶
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
PasswordInput
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ <input type=’password’> and a confirmation input. Form processing will fail if password and confirmation differs, else it will return the password as a utf-8 encoded string.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
IntervalWidget
(attrs=None, setdomid=None, suffix=None)[source]¶ Custom widget to display an interval composed by 2 fields. This widget is expected to be used with a
CompoundField
containing the two actual fields.Exemple usage:
class MyForm(FieldsForm): price = CompoundField(fields=(IntField(name='minprice'), IntField(name='maxprice')), label=_('price'), widget=IntervalWidget())
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
BitSelect
(attrs=None, multiple=True, **kwargs)[source]¶ Select widget for IntField using a vocabulary with bit masks as values.
See also
BitFieldFacet
.
Form controls¶
Those classes are not proper widget (they are not associated to field) but are
used as form controls. Their API is similar to widgets except that field
argument given to render()
will be None.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
Button
(label=('button_ok', 'OK_ICON'), attrs=None, setdomid=None, name='', value='', onclick=None, cwaction=None)[source]¶ Simple <input type=’button’>, base class for global form buttons.
Note that label is a msgid which will be translated at form generation time, you should not give an already translated string.
-
class
cubicweb.web.formwidgets.
SubmitButton
(label=('button_ok', 'OK_ICON'), attrs=None, setdomid=None, name='', value='', onclick=None, cwaction=None)[source]¶ Simple <input type=’submit’>, main button to submit a form
Base form classes¶
Besides the automagic form we’ll see later, there are roughly two main form classes in CubicWeb:
-
class
cubicweb.web.views.forms.
FieldsForm
(req, rset=None, row=None, col=None, submitmsg=None, mainform=True, **kwargs)[source]¶ This is the base class for fields based forms.
Attributes
The following attributes may be either set on subclasses or given on form selection to customize the generated form:
needs_js
- sequence of javascript files that should be added to handle this form
(through
add_js()
) needs_css
- sequence of css files that should be added to handle this form (through
add_css()
) domid
- value for the “id” attribute of the <form> tag
action
- value for the “action” attribute of the <form> tag
onsubmit
- value for the “onsubmit” attribute of the <form> tag
cssclass
- value for the “class” attribute of the <form> tag
cssstyle
- value for the “style” attribute of the <form> tag
cwtarget
- value for the “target” attribute of the <form> tag
redirect_path
- relative to redirect to after submitting the form
copy_nav_params
- flag telling if navigation parameters should be copied back in hidden inputs
form_buttons
- sequence of form control (
Button
widgets instances) form_renderer_id
- identifier of the form renderer to use to render the form
fieldsets_in_order
- sequence of fieldset names , to control order
autocomplete
- set to False to add ‘autocomplete=off’ in the form open tag
Generic methods
-
Form.
field_by_name
(name, role=None)¶ Return field with the given name and role.
Raise
FieldNotFound
if the field can’t be found.
-
Form.
fields_by_name
(name, role=None)¶ Return a list of fields with the given name and role.
Form construction methods
-
Form.
remove_field
(field)¶ Remove the given field.
-
Form.
append_field
(field)¶ Append the given field.
-
Form.
insert_field_before
(field, name, role=None)¶ Insert the given field before the field of given name and role.
-
Form.
insert_field_after
(field, name, role=None)¶ Insert the given field after the field of given name and role.
Append an hidden field to the form. name, value and extra keyword arguments will be given to the field constructor. The inserted field is returned.
Form rendering methods
-
render
(formvalues=None, renderer=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ Render this form, using the renderer given as argument or the default according to
form_renderer_id
. The rendered form is returned as a unicode string.formvalues is an optional dictionary containing values that will be considered as field’s value.
Extra keyword arguments will be given to renderer’s
render()
method.
Form posting methods
Once a form is posted, you can retrieve the form on the controller side and use the following methods to ease processing. For “simple” forms, this should looks like :
form = self._cw.vreg['forms'].select('myformid', self._cw) posted = form.process_posted() # do something with the returned dictionary
Notice that form related to entity edition should usually use the edit controller which will handle all the logic for you.
-
class
cubicweb.web.views.forms.
EntityFieldsForm
(_cw, rset=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ This class is designed for forms used to edit some entities. It should handle for you all the underlying stuff necessary to properly work with the generic
EditController
.
As you have probably guessed, choosing between them is easy. Simply ask you the
question ‘I am editing an entity or not?’. If the answer is yes, use
EntityFieldsForm
, else use FieldsForm
.
Actually there exists a third form class:
-
class
cubicweb.web.views.forms.
CompositeForm
(*args, **kwargs)[source]¶ Form composed of sub-forms. Typical usage is edition of multiple entities at once.
but you’ll use this one rarely.
Renderers¶
Note
Form renderers are responsible to layout a form to HTML.
Here are the base renderers available:
-
class
cubicweb.web.views.formrenderers.
FormRenderer
(req=None, rset=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ This is the ‘default’ renderer, displaying fields in a two columns table:
field1 label field1 input field2 label field2 input buttons
-
class
cubicweb.web.views.formrenderers.
HTableFormRenderer
(req=None, rset=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ The ‘htable’ form renderer display fields horizontally in a table:
field1 label field2 label field1 input field2 input buttons
-
class
cubicweb.web.views.formrenderers.
EntityCompositeFormRenderer
(req=None, rset=None, row=None, col=None, **kwargs)[source]¶ This is a specific renderer for the multiple entities edition form (‘muledit’).
Each entity form will be displayed in row off a table, with a check box for each entities to indicate which ones are edited. Those checkboxes should be automatically updated when something is edited.