A custom Rails form builder for Vue.js
<%= vue_form_for User.new do |f| %>
<%= f.text_field :name %>
<% end %>
<form ...>
...
<input v-model="user.name" type="text" name="user[name]" ... />
</form>
Add the following line to Gemfile
:
gem "vue-rails-form-builder"
Run bundle install
on the terminal.
<%= vue_form_for User.new do |f| %>
<%= f.text_field :name %>
<%= f.submit "Create" %>
<% end %>
The above ERB template will be rendered into the following HTML fragment:
<form class="new_user" id="new_user" action="/users" accept-charset="UTF-8" method="post">
<input name="utf8" type="hidden" value="✓" />
<input type="hidden" name="authenticity_token" value="..." />
<input v-model="user.name" type="text" name="user[name]" id="user_name" />
<input type="submit" name="commit" value="Create" />
</form>
Note that the third <input>
element has a v-model
attriubte, which can be
interpreted by Vue.js as the directive to create two-way data bindings between
form fields and component's data.
If you are using the Webpacker,
create app/javascript/packs/new_user_form.js
with following code:
import Vue from 'vue/dist/vue.esm'
document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", () => {
const NewUserForm = new Vue({
el: "#new_user",
data: {
user: {
name: ""
}
}
})
})
Add this line to the ERB template:
<%= javascript_pack_tag "new_user_form" %>
Then, you can get the value of user[name]
field by the user.name
.
If you use Rails 5.1 or above, you can also use vue_form_with
:
<%= vue_form_with model: User.new do |f| %>
<%= f.text_field :name %>
<%= f.submit "Create" %>
<% end %>
Visit vue-rails-form-builder-demo
for a working Rails demo application using the vue-rails-form-builder
.
To vue_form_for
and vue_form_with
methods you can provide the same options
as form_for
and form_with
.
There is a special option:
:vue_scope
- The prefix used to the input field names within the Vue component.
This gem provides two additional helper methods: vue_tag
and vue_content_tag
.
Basically, they behave like tag
and content_tag
helpers of Action Views.
But, they interpret the HTML options in a different way as explained below.
If the HTML options have a :bind
key and its value is a hash,
they get transformed into the Vue.js v-bind
directives.
In the example below, these two lines have the same result:
<%= vue_content_tag(:span, "Hello", bind: { style: "{ color: textColor }" }) %>
<%= vue_content_tag(:span, "Hello", "v-bind:style" => "{ color: textColor }" }) %>
Note that you should use the latter style if you want to specify modifiers
to the v-bind
directives. For example:
<%= vue_content_tag(:span, "Hello", "v-bind:text-content.prop" => "message" }) %>
If the HTML options have a :on
key and its value is a hash,
they get transformed into the Vue.js v-on
directives.
In the example below, these two lines have the same result:
<%= vue_content_tag(:span, "Hello", on: { click: "doThis" }) %>
<%= vue_content_tag(:span, "Hello", "v-on:click" => "doThis" }) %>
Note that you should use the latter style if you want to specify modifiers
to the v-on
directives. For example:
<%= vue_content_tag(:span, "Hello", "v-on:click.once" => "doThis" }) %>
<%= vue_content_tag(:button, "Hello", "v-on:click.prevent" => "doThis" }) %>
If the HTML options have a string value (not a boolean value)
for checked
, disabled
, multiple
, readonly
or selected
key,
the key gets transformed by adding v-bind:
to its head.
In the example below, these two lines have the same result:
<%= vue_content_tag(:button, "Click me!", disabled: "!clickable") %>
<%= vue_content_tag(:button, "Click me!", "v-bind:disabled" => "!clickable") %>
If you want to add a normal attribute without v-bind:
prefix,
specify true
(boolean) to these keys:
<%= vue_content_tag(:button, "Click me!", disabled: true) %>
This line produces the following HTML fragment:
<button disabled="disabled">Click me!</button>
If the HTML options have one or more of the following keys
text
,html
,show
,if
,else
,else_if
,for
,model
,pre
,cloak
,once
then, these keys get transformed by adding v-
to their head.
In the example below, these two lines have the same result:
<%= vue_tag(:hr, if: "itemsPresent") %>
<%= vue_tag(:hr, "v-if" => "itemsPresent") %>
Note that the :else_if
key is transformed into the v-else-if
directive:
<%= vue_tag(:hr, else_if: "itemsPresent") %>
<%= vue_tag(:hr, "v-else-if" => "itemsPresent") %>
When you build HTML forms using vue_form_for
,
the form building helpers, such as text_field
, check_box
, etc.,
have these additional behavior.
Example:
<%= vue_form_for User.new do |f| %>
<%= f.text_field :name, model: "userName" %>
<label>
<%= f.check_box :administrator, on: { click: "doThis" } %> Administrator
</label>
<%= f.submit "Create", disabled: "!submittable" %>
<% end %>
When you build HTML forms using vue_form_for
, the form builder has the
vue_prefix
method that returns the prefix string to the Vue.js property names.
See the following code:
<%= vue_form_for User.new do |f| %>
<%= f.text_field :name %>
<%= f.submit "Create", disabled: "user.name === ''" %>
<% end %>
The vue_prefix
method of the form builder (f
) returns the string "user"
so that you can rewrite the third line of the example above like this:
<%= f.submit "Create", disabled: "#{f.vue_prefix}.name === ''" %>
This method is convenient especially when the form has nested attributes:
<%= vue_form_for @user do |f| %>
<%= f.text_field :name %>
<%= f.fields_for :emails do |g| %>
<%= g.text_field :address,
disabled: "user.emails_attributes[#{g.index}]._destroy" %>
<%= g.check_box :_destroy if g.object.persisted? %>
<% end %>
<%= f.submit "Create", disabled: "#{f.vue_prefix}.name === ''" %>
<% end %>
Using the vue_prefix
method, you can rewrite the fifth line more concisely:
disabled: g.vue_prefix + "._destroy" %>
As the official Vue.js document says:
v-model
will ignore the initialvalue
,checked
orselected
attributes found on any form elements. (https://vuejs.org/v2/guide/forms.html)
Because of this, all form controls get reset after the Vue component is mounted.
However, you can use vue-data-scooper plugin in order to keep the original state of the form.
The vue-rails-form-builder
is distributed under the MIT license. (MIT-LICENSE)
Tsutomu Kuroda ([email protected])