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  • License MIT

Lifecycle logic for forms: edit, submit, error, success, pending. <1kb.

Package Exports

  • form-lifecycle

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (form-lifecycle) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

form-lifecycle Build Status

Lifecycle logic for forms: edit, submit, error, success, pending. <1kb.

Install

$ npm install --save form-lifecycle

Usage

var form = require('form-lifecycle')

var form = form.create()
// => {pristine: true, error: null, pending: false, fields: {}} 

var form2 = form.submit(form)
// => {pristine: true, error: null, pending: true, fields: {}})

// ... And more. See below.

API

Every action returns a new form object, never mutating the existing one.

Lifecycle.create([data]) -> form

Creates a basic form, extended by initial if desired.

{
  pristine: true
  pending: false
  error: null
  fields: {}
}

Also available as alias Lifecycle.reset.

Lifecycle.edit(form, newFields) -> newForm

Extends fields with newFields.

Lifecycle.submit(form) -> newForm

  • pending to true
  • pristine to true
  • error to null
  • fields unchanged

Lifecycle.error(form, [error]) -> newForm

  • pending to false
  • pristine to false
  • error to supplied error or null
  • fields unchanged

Lifecycle.success(form) -> newForm

  • pending to false
  • pristine to true
  • error to null
  • fields unchanged

Lifecycle.atObjectPath(path) -> lifecycleAtPath

Run FormLifecycle methods at a path of a given object (usually your app state).

Given a string or array path, returns the same functions as above, set to run at the location determined by the path. Instead of taking a form as your first argument, these take an object.

The form will make changes to the object at the given path, and return the changed object.

Example:

var Form = require('form-lifecycle')
var state = {
  login: {
    form: Form.create()
  }
}

var loginForm = Form.atObjectPath('login.form')

// Creates a new state object, with all references the same except for the path to state.login.form.
var newState = loginForm.submit(state)

With Redux

var Form = require('form-lifecycle')
var initialState = {
  login: {
    form: Form.create()
  }
}
var loginForm = Form.atObjectPath('login.form')

function myReducer (state, action) {
  switch(action.type) {
    case 'LOGIN': return loginForm.submit(state)
    case 'LOGIN_SUCCESS': return loginForm.success(state)
    case 'LOGIN_ERROR': return loginForm.error(state, action.payload)
    case 'LOGIN_EDIT_FORM': return loginForm.edit(state, action.payload)
    default: return state
  }
}

License

MIT © Andrew Joslin