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package HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Catalyst;
# ABSTRACT: using HFH forms in Catalyst


__END__
=pod

=head1 NAME

HTML::FormHandler::Manual::Catalyst - using HFH forms in Catalyst

=head1 VERSION

version 0.40019

=head1 SYNOPSIS

L<Manual Index|HTML::FormHandler::Manual>

This part of the FormHandler Manual describes the use of the L<HTML::FormHandler>
package in Catalyst controllers.

See the other FormHandler documentation at L<HTML::FormHandler::Manual>, or
the base class at L<HTML::FormHandler>.

=head1 DESCRIPTION

Although L<HTML::FormHandler> can be used in any Perl web application, module, or
script, one of its most common uses is in L<Catalyst> applications.

Using a form takes only a few lines of code, so it's not necessary to have
a L<Catalyst> base controller, although you could make a base controller for
FormHandler if you're doing more than the basics.

=head2 A Controller Example

The following example uses chained dispatching. The 'form' method is called
by both the create and edit actions.

   package BookDB::Controller::Borrower;

   use Moose;
   BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller' }

   sub borrower_base : Chained PathPart('borrower') CaptureArgs(0) { }

   sub list : Chained('borrower_base') PathPart('list') Args(0) {
      my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
      my $borrowers = [ $c->model('DB::Borrower')->all ];
      my @columns = ( 'name', 'email' );
      $c->stash( borrowers => $borrowers, columns => \@columns,
                 template => 'borrower/list.tt' );
   }

   sub add : Chained('borrower_base') PathPart('add') Args(0) {
      my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
      # Create the empty borrower row for the form
      $c->stash( borrower => $c->model('DB::Borrower')->new_result({}) );
      return $self->form($c);
   }

   sub item : Chained('borrower_base') PathPart('') CaptureArgs(1) {
      my ( $self, $c, $borrower_id ) = @_;
      $c->stash( borrower => $c->model('DB::Borrower')->find($borrower_id) );
   }

   sub edit : Chained('item') PathPart('edit') Args(0) {
      my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
      return $self->form($c);
   }

   sub form {
      my ( $self, $c ) = @_;

      my $form = BookDB::Form::Borrower->new;
      $c->stash( form => $form, template => 'borrower/form.tt' );
      return unless $form->process( item => $c->stash->{borrower},
         params => $c->req->parameters );
      $c->res->redirect( $c->uri_for($self->action_for('list')) );
   }

   sub delete : Chained('item') PathPart('delete') Args(0) {
      my ( $self, $c ) = @_;

      $c->stash->{borrower}->delete;
      $c->res->redirect( $c->uri_for($c->action_for('list')) );
   }

   1;

=head2 Another way to set up your form

If you are setting the schema or other form attributes (such as the user_id,
or other attributes) on your form you could create a base controller that would set
these in the form on each call using L<Catalyst::Component::InstancePerContext>,
or set them in a base Chained method.

   sub book_base : Chained PathPart('book') CaptureArgs(0) {
      my ( $self, $c ) = @_;
      my $form = MyApp::Form->new;
      $form->schema( $c->model('DB')->schema );
      $form->params( $c->req->parameters );
      $form->user_id( $c->user->id );
      $c->stash( form => $form );
   }

Then you could just pass in the item_id when the form is processed.

   return unless $c->stash->{form}->process( item_id => $id );

=head2 Putting a form in a Moose attribute

You can also put your form in a Moose attribute in the controller.

    package MyApp::Controller::Book;
    use Moose;
    BEGIN { extends 'Catalyst::Controller'; }
    use MyApp::Form::Book;
    has 'edit_form' => ( isa => 'MyApp::Form::Book', is => 'rw',
       lazy => 1, default => sub { MyApp::Form::Book->new } );

Then you can process the form in your actions with
C<< $self->edit_form->process( params => $c->req->body_parameters ); >> or
C<< my $result = $self->edit_form->run( params => $c->req->body_parameters ); >>.

=head2 Using  HTML::FillInForm

If you want to use L<HTML::FillInForm> to fill in values instead of
doing it in directly in a template using either the field or the form 'fif'
methods, you can use L<Catalyst::View::FillInForm> on your view class:

    package MyApp::View::TT;
    use Moose;
    with 'Catalyst::View::FillInForm';
    ....
    1;

and set the 'fif' hash in the 'fillinform' stash variable:

    $self->form->process( ... );
    $c->stash( fillinform => $self->form->fif );
    return unless $form->validated;

When the 'fillinform' stash variable is set, HTML::FillInForm will automatically
be used by your view to fill in the form values. This can be very helpful
when you want to build your forms by hand, or when you have legacy forms that
you're just trying to hook up to FormHandler.

=head2 The Catalyst context

FormHandler has a 'ctx' attribute that can be used to set the Catalyst context (or
anything you want, really). But if you can avoid passing in the context, you should do so,
because you're mixing up your MVC and it makes it much more difficult to test your
forms. But if you need to do it, you can:

    my $form = MyApp::Form->new( ctx => $c );

Usually you should prefer to add new attributes to your form:

    package MyApp::Form;
    use HTML::FormHandler::Moose;
    extends 'HTML::FormHandler';

    has 'user_id' => ( is => 'rw' );
    has 'hostname' => ( is => 'rw' );
    has 'captcha_store' => ( is => 'rw' );
    ....
    1;

Then just pass the attributes in on new:

    my $form => MyApp::Form->new( user_id => $c->user->id, hostname => $c->req->host,
        captcha_store => $c->{session}->{captcha} );

Or set them using accessors:

    $form->user_id( $c->user->id );
    $form->hostname( $c->req->host );
    $form->captcha_store( $c->{session}->{captcha} );

Then you can access these attributes in your form validation methods:

    sub validate_selection {
       my ( $self, $field ) = @_;
       if( $field->value eq 'something' && $self->hostname eq 'something_else' )
       {
          $field->add_error("some error message" );
       }
    }

=head1 AUTHOR

FormHandler Contributors - see HTML::FormHandler

=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Gerda Shank.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.

=cut