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vue-formulario/README.md

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# Vue Formulate
---------------
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[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/wearebraid/vue-formulate.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/wearebraid/vue-formulate)
[![Current Version](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/vue-formulate.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/vue-formulate)
[![License](https://img.shields.io/github/license/wearebraid/vue-formulate.svg)](https://github.com/wearebraid/vue-formulate/blob/master/LICENSE.txt)
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### What is it?
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Vue Formulate is a [Vue](https://vuejs.org/) plugin that exposes an elegant
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mechanism for building and validating forms with a centralized data store.
### Show and tell
You'll find an easy to use example, in [the example directory](https://github.com/wearebraid/vue-formulate/tree/master/example)
as well as a live demo available at: [demo.vueformulate.com](https://demo.vueformulate.com).
### Get Started
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#### Download
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First download the `vue-formulate` package from npm:
```sh
npm install vue-formulate
```
If you want to use ES6 features in your project
(and this readme assumes you do), then you'll also
need Babel:
```sh
babel-preset-env
babel-preset-stage-2
```
Many Vue/Vuex projects require Babels `stage-2` preset.
Best practice is to include a `.babelrc` in the project
root:
```sh
{
"presets": [
["env", { "modules": false }],
"stage-2"
]
}
```
#### Installation
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Install `vue-formulate` like any other vue plugin:
```js
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import Vue from 'vue'
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import formulate from 'vue-formulate'
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Vue.use(formulate)
```
#### Vuex
`vue-formulate` needs to be linked to your vuex store. Vuex can be
configured as a single root store, or as namespaced modules and `vue-formualte`
can work with either setup.
**Vuex Module**
```js
import {formulateModule} from 'vue-formulate'
export default formulateModule('namespace')
```
Using a namespaced vuex module is the recommended installation method. Just be
sure to replace `'namespace'` with the namespace of your vuex module.
Additionally, when using a vuex namespace, you _must_ also pass the namespace
in the Vue plugin installation call:
```js
Vue.use(formulate, {vuexModule: 'namespace'})
```
Alternatively, you can install `vue-formulate`'s store elements to your vuex
root store:
**Root Store**
```js
import Vue from 'vue'
import Vuex from 'vuex'
import {formulateState, formulateGetters, formulateMutations} from 'vue-formulate'
Vue.use(Vuex)
const state = () => ({
// your own state data can live next to vue-formulate's data
// Note: formulateState is a curried function.
your: 'data',
...formulateState()()
})
const getters = {
// Your own getters can live next to vue-formulate's getters
yourGetter (state) {
return state.your
},
...formulateGetters()
}
const mutations = {
// Your own mutations can live next to vue-formulate's mutations
setYour (state, payload) {
state.your = payload
},
...formulateMutations()
}
export default new Vuex.Store({
state,
getters,
mutations
})
```
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### Usage
`vue-formulate` automatically registers two components `formulate` and
`formulate-element`. These two elements are able to address most of your form
building needs. Here's a simple example:
```html
<formulate name="registration">
<formulate-element
name="email"
type="email"
/>
...more formulate-elements
</formulate>
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```
You can think of `<formulate>` elements a little bit like traditional
`<form>` tags. You _must_ wrap your `formulate-element` components
in a `<formulate>` component. The `formulate` component has a single
required prop `name` which creates the forms key in the vuex store.
All `formulate-element` components nested inside a `<formulate>`
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component will automatically commit mutations directly to the
store. The store becomes a live representation of all your forms
values.
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The `formulate-element` component is a powerful component which handles field
generation.
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### Validation Rules
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There are several built-in validation methods and you can easily add your own as well.
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Rule | Arguments
----------|---------------
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required | *none*
email | *none*
confirmed | confirmation field
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You can add as many validation rules as you want to each `formulate-element`,
simply chain your rules with pipes `|'. Additional arguments can be passed to
validation rules by using parenthesis after the rule name:
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```
validation="required|confirmed(confirmation_field)"
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```
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The field label used in built-in validation methods is the `validation-label`
attribute on your `formulate-element`. If no `validation-label` is found then
the `label` attribute is used, and if no `label` attribute is found it will
fall back to the fields `name` attribute (which is required).
#### Custom Validation Rules
Validation rules are easy to write! They're just simple functions that are
always passed at least one argument, an object containing the `field` name,
`value` of the field, validation `label`, `error` function to generate an error
message, and an object containing all the `values` for the entire form.
Additionally, validation rules can pass an unlimited number of extra arguments.
These arguments are passed as the 2nd-nth arguments to the validation rule.
Their values are parsed from the optional parenthesis in the validation
attribute on the `formulate-element`.
```html
<formulate-element
type="password"
name="password"
label="Password"
validation="confirmed(password_confirmation_field)"
/>
```
Validation rules should return an error message string if they failed, or
`false` if the input data is valid.
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Adding your own validation rules is easy. Just pass an additional object
of rule functions in the plugins installation call:
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```js
Vue.use(formulate, {
rules: {
isPizza ({field, value, error, values, label}) {
return value === 'pizza' ? false : `label is not pizza.`
}
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}
})
```
### Styling
Absolutely zero styles are included so feel free to write your own! The
`form-element` components have a wrapper `div` that receives the following
classes:
```
formulate-element
formulate-element--has-value
formulate-element--has-errors
```
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### Full Documentation
There are many more options available, more documentation coming soon.