THIS LIBRARY IS LOOKING FOR MAINTAINERS. I (LUIS FELIPE ZAGUINI) DON'T HAVE ENOUGH BANDWIDTH ANYMORE TO WORK ON OSS. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED, PLEASE CONTACT ME: luisfelipezaguini [at] gmail [dot] com
Also, we're in the process of making this library way more flexible, allowing people to use whatever form and wizard library they like. Please read this issue and comment if you will to contribute.
A multi-step form component powered by formik
and react-albus
.
Large forms are generally bad for User Experience: it becomes both tiresome to fill and, in most of the cases, it gets slow. I've built this lib to tackle this problem: dividing one big form in multiple smaller forms, it gets much easier to reason about, both as a developer and as a user.
All the smaller forms may include validation (powered by yup
) and default values.
You can check the demo here, with the corresponding source code here.
You need to have formik
and react-albus
installed -- they are peer dependencies.
After that, just yarn add formik-wizard
and you're good to go!
If you plan to validate the sections, you need to install yup
as well!
Check out the example source code and the typings.
There's a hook called useFormikWizard
that you can use to read and write sections values and form statuses.
I recommend using immer
because you're modifying the steps data directly!
It's pretty straightforward: just use the Form
prop component as a children
forwarder. Example:
<FormikWizard
{...props}
Form={({ children }) => children}
/>
That's needed because there's no form
web component on React Native and formik-wizard
(and formik
) fallbacks to it.
Also, React Native doesn't have a submit button/input. To achieve a similar result, grab formik's context and fire its submit handler.
REMEMBER: IT'S NOT FORMIK-WIZARD'S CONTEXT. IT'S FORMIK'S!!!
That's a known issue. Jared palmer's tsdx doesn't handle default exports very well. Two options:
import FormikWizard from 'formik-wizard'
function App() {
return <FormikWizard.default />
}
or...
import { FormikWizard } from 'formik-wizard'
function App() {
return <FormikWizard />
}
The onSubmit
function expects a Promise
. Whatever you return from that Promise
will be set as the status. For example:
import { useCallback } from 'react'
const handleSubmit = useCallback((values) => {
return new Promise((resolve) => {
setTimeout(() => {
resolve({
message: "success"
})
}, 5000)
})
}, [])
While that Promise
is pending, the isSubmitting
flag is set to true
. The status is set automatically from the return of that Promise
.
The step form is wrapped inside a Formik component
but its props
aren't propagated to the form component. Anyway, you'll still have access to the
Formik context through one of these methods:
- by using the
connect HOC
. - by using the
Field component
with a render prop or a callback function as children. - by using the
useFormikContext
hook (available in Formik's v2).
MIT
This project was bootstrapped with TSDX.