Working With Angular Template Forms

Jan 14, 2017 reading time 13 minutes

Working With Angular Template Forms

In this blog I want to explain and show you how to work with Angular’s template driven forms.

The Problem

I was recently giving an Angular course to awesome people and I noticed that working with Angular forms seems to be one of the most complicated things in Angular.

The Situation

We will start with an Angular application which has a structure like this:

app
├── app.component.ts
├── app.component.html
├── form.component.ts
├── form.component.html
├── app.module.ts
└── main.ts
index.html
systemjs.config.js
tsconfig.json
tslint.json
styles.css
package.json

this is an easy way to start with Angular and template forms.

I did not mention files like favicon etc. They do not really impact our work here

Now lets got create a form. For this I will grab bootstraps form to get a nice look and feel.

Bootstraps Forms

Now we add the bootstrap cdn to our index.html.

<head>
  <link
    rel="stylesheet"
    href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.3.7/css/bootstrap.min.css"
  />
</head>

Out app.component.html looks like this:

<div class="container">
  <h1>{{title}}</h1>
  <form-component></form-component>
</div>

Introducing the Form

We remove the checkbox and the file upload from the copied form from bootstrap for clarity and add the form template to our form component. Further we want to handle a Name for understanding. Lets modify the template to only work with a name.

So our form.component.html looks like this now:

<form>
  <div class="form-group">
    <label for="exampleInputName">Name</label>
    <input
      type="name"
      class="form-control"
      id="exampleInputName"
      placeholder="Name"
    />
  </div>
  <button type="submit" class="btn btn-default">Submit</button>
</form>

So what we did here so far is nothing Angular related! We added HTML-Form things.

We will now go ahead and make this thing an Angular form.

Add Angular to the form

The model

We will use a normal customer to deal with the form. Also nothing spectacular here, we add a class representing this customer:

export class Customer {
    constructor(public name: string) { }
}

and we place it in a special folder called models

app
├── models
    └──  customer.model.ts
├── app.component.ts
├── app.component.html
├── form.component.ts
├── form.component.html
├── app.module.ts
└── main.ts
index.html
systemjs.config.js
tsconfig.json
tslint.json
styles.css
package.json

Then we can make a new model in the components constructor like this

export class FormComponent {
  public title: string = 'Template Forms';
  public model: Customer;

  constructor() {
    this.model = new Customer('Fabian');
  }
}

Adding the binding to the model with ngModel

Next thing is to add the binding to the inputs in our forms. And here is the first time we marry Angular with our html.

We take the ngModel-directive to tell the field “Hey, this thing I give you here is important for you form. Please, my little form, take care of it”

<div class="container">
  <!--...-->
  <input
    type="name"
    class="form-control"
    id="exampleInputName"
    placeholder="Name"
    ngModel
  />
  <!--...-->
</div>

Now this input is marked with the ngModel-directive. But what is that good for?

Before we go on clarify that can also take care of something Angular prepared for us. What we want to do now is asking our form about its state. What is the state of our form currently and when the user types something in? We can not access our form yet, because we do not have a name to ask for. So let’s introduce one!

We can do this by adding a variable in the template with the “#”-Sign and tagging the form with the ngForm-directive Angular prepared for us.

This means:

<form></form>

becomes to

<form #myform="ngForm"></form>

We have introduced a variable and assign the complete form to it. Angular introduced this ngForm for us in the background, we are only catching it up and take a variable to make it accessible. Now we are able to ask the form for its state! This variable is called a template reference variable.

What we want is to see the state of our form. We achieve that by adding the ngModel-directive, by giving the form a variable we can access it and one last piece is missing. If we use ngModel in an form control, we also have to tell the Angular form how it should be accessed. So we need a name. Lets introduce a name that this control can be registered onto the form under that name.

<div class="container">
  <!--...-->
  <input
    type="text"
    class="form-control"
    id="exampleInputName"
    placeholder="Name"
    ngModel
    name="name"
  />
  <!--...-->
</div>

With those three things we can ask the form about its state with

myform.value

like this:

<p>{{ myform.value | json }}</p>

<form #myform="ngForm">
  <div class="form-group">
    <label for="exampleInputName">Name</label>
    <input
      type="text"
      class="form-control"
      id="exampleInputName"
      placeholder="Name"
      ngModel
      name="name"
    />
  </div>
  <button type="submit" class="btn btn-default">Submit</button>
</form>

The ngModel directive is forcing Angular to persist the state of the form to the form object. So we read it with

{
  {
    myform.value | json;
  }
}

But further to that it is doing nothing. We got our state only persisted to the form. We want to interact with our model, right?

Therefore we have to intruduce some kind of databinding. As we know that databinding is working with () and/or [] we have no databinding going on here so far.

We could do the property binding like this

<input ... [ngModel]="model.name" name="name" />

Then Angular would take this ngModel directive and connect it to a property on our component called “model.name”.

Remember we created a model on our component with its constructor

When the initial value is set from the component the value would be reflected into the input field. But this is only one way binding! When the value in the input changes it would not be reflected into the model. The form would change its state but the model know nothing about it.

To get the model also changed when the user types something in we have to introduce two way binding like this:

<input ... [(ngModel)]="model.name" name="name" />

So the forms state would now reflect the changes into the forms state and into the model we want to work with when submitting. In addition to that the initial state is set because we create a model on the constructor.

Further steps with the form

We can use the forms template reference variable also to check some properties on the form.

The template reference variable offers us a form-property which we can check

We can check the following states on the form :


<!-- if user touched every field of the form -->
<p>{{myform.form.touched}}</p>

<!-- if every field of the form is not touched yet -->
<p>{{myform.form.untouched}}</p>

<!-- field has not been changed value since it is displayed -->
<p>{{myform.form.pristine}}</p>

<!-- user changed the value since it is displayed -->
<p>{{myform.form.dirty}}</p>

<!-- form is valid -->
<p>{{myform.form.valid}}</p>

<!-- form is invalid -->
<p>{{myform.form.invalid}}</p>

Lets face the “valid” and “invalid” for a second. We can apply a normal HTML required attribute at one control to have a reason why a form should be valid or invalid.

<form #myform="ngForm">
  <div class="form-group">
    <label for="exampleInputName">Name</label>
    <input
      type="text"
      class="form-control"
      id="exampleInputName"
      placeholder="Name"
      [(ngModel)]="model.name"
      name="name"
      required
    />
  </div>
  <button type="submit" class="btn btn-default">Submit</button>
</form>

So we can go ahead and for example disable the submit button and show a message when the form is not valid.

<form #myform="ngForm">
  <div class="form-group">
    <label for="exampleInputName">Name</label>
    <input
      type="text"
      class="form-control"
      id="exampleInputName"
      placeholder="Name"
      [(ngModel)]="model.name"
      name="name"
      required
    />
  </div>

  <span *ngIf="!myform.form.valid">Check your form</span>

  <button type="submit" class="btn btn-default" [disabled]="!myform.form.valid">
    Submit
  </button>
</form>

So this gives us the possibility to ask the form for some variables Angular gives us.

We can also do this whole template variable thing on a control itself and ask the control for its state instead of the whole form. The same properties which are valid for the form apply also on the control. Therefore we have to grab our ngModel-directive again and assign it to a template variable to make the control, or better: the model assigned to this control, accessible.

<input
  type="text"
  class="form-control"
  id="exampleInputName"
  placeholder="Name"
  [(ngModel)]="model.name"
  name="name"
  required
  #name="ngModel"
/>

Now we can ask for the state of this control in the same way like the form:

<form #myform="ngForm">
  <div class="form-group">
    <label for="exampleInputName">Name</label>
    <input
      type="text"
      class="form-control"
      id="exampleInputName"
      placeholder="Name"
      [(ngModel)]="model.name"
      name="name"
      required
      #name="ngModel"
    />
  </div>

  <span *ngIf="!name.valid">name is invalid</span>

  <span *ngIf="!myform.form.valid">Check your form</span>

  <button type="submit" class="btn btn-default" [disabled]="!myform.form.valid">
    Submit
  </button>
</form>

Submitting the Form

Our button at the end of the form is currently set to submit the form. But we do not catch the submitting so far. So lets do that.

<h4>Form Value</h4>

<p>{{myform.value | json}}</p>

<form #myform="ngForm" (ngSubmit)="alertMyFormModel()">
  <div class="form-group">
    <label for="exampleInputEmail1">Email address</label>
    <input
      type="email"
      class="form-control"
      id="exampleInputEmail1"
      placeholder="Email"
      ngModel
      name="email"
    />
  </div>
  <div class="form-group">
    <label for="exampleInputPassword1">Password</label>
    <input
      type="password"
      class="form-control"
      id="exampleInputPassword1"
      placeholder="Password"
    />
  </div>
  <button type="submit" class="btn btn-default">Submit</button>
</form>

We introduced the ngSubmit-directive and assigned it a function we have to implement on our component.

export class FormComponent {
  public title: string = 'Template Forms';
  public model: Customer;

  constructor() {
    this.model = new Customer('Fabian');
  }

  public alertMyFormModel() {
    alert(JSON.stringify(this.model));
  }
}

If you now click the button the form gets submitted and you should see the model in a json string in an alert box.

I hope I could clarify some things about Angulars template driven forms.

Best regards

Fabian