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interface FormBuilderInterface in Drupal 10

Same name and namespace in other branches
  1. 8 core/lib/Drupal/Core/Form/FormBuilderInterface.php \Drupal\Core\Form\FormBuilderInterface
  2. 9 core/lib/Drupal/Core/Form/FormBuilderInterface.php \Drupal\Core\Form\FormBuilderInterface

Provides an interface for form building and processing.

Hierarchy

Expanded class hierarchy of FormBuilderInterface

All classes that implement FormBuilderInterface

27 files declare their use of FormBuilderInterface
AjaxFormBlock.php in core/modules/system/tests/modules/ajax_forms_test/src/Plugin/Block/AjaxFormBlock.php
AreaDisplayLinkTest.php in core/modules/views/tests/src/Kernel/Handler/AreaDisplayLinkTest.php
BlockListBuilder.php in core/modules/block/src/BlockListBuilder.php
DbLogController.php in core/modules/dblog/src/Controller/DbLogController.php
DisplayLink.php in core/modules/views/src/Plugin/views/area/DisplayLink.php

... See full list

File

core/lib/Drupal/Core/Form/FormBuilderInterface.php, line 8

Namespace

Drupal\Core\Form
View source
interface FormBuilderInterface {

  /**
   * Request key for AJAX forms that submit to the form's original route.
   *
   * This constant is distinct from a "drupal_ajax" value for
   * \Drupal\Core\EventSubscriber\MainContentViewSubscriber::WRAPPER_FORMAT,
   * because that one is set for all AJAX submissions, including ones with
   * dedicated routes for which self::buildForm() should not exit early via a
   * \Drupal\Core\Form\FormAjaxException.
   *
   * @todo Re-evaluate the need for this constant after
   *   https://www.drupal.org/node/2502785 and
   *   https://www.drupal.org/node/2503429.
   */
  const AJAX_FORM_REQUEST = 'ajax_form';

  /**
   * Determines the ID of a form.
   *
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface|string $form_arg
   *   The value is identical to that of self::getForm()'s $form_arg argument.
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface $form_state
   *   The current state of the form.
   *
   * @return string
   *   The unique string identifying the desired form.
   */
  public function getFormId($form_arg, FormStateInterface &$form_state);

  /**
   * Gets a renderable form array.
   *
   * This function should be used instead of self::buildForm() when $form_state
   * is not needed (i.e., when initially rendering the form) and is often
   * used as a menu callback.
   *
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface|string $form_arg
   *   The value must be one of the following:
   *   - The name of a class that implements \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface.
   *   - An instance of a class that implements \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface.
   * @param ...
   *   Any additional arguments are passed on to the functions called by
   *   \Drupal::formBuilder()->getForm(), including the unique form constructor
   *   function. For example, the node_edit form requires that a node object is
   *   passed in here when it is called. These are available to implementations
   *   of hook_form_alter() and hook_form_FORM_ID_alter() as the array
   *   $form_state->getBuildInfo()['args'].
   *
   * @return array
   *   The form array.
   *
   * @see \Drupal\Core\Form\FormBuilderInterface::buildForm()
   */
  public function getForm($form_arg);

  /**
   * Builds and processes a form for a given form ID.
   *
   * The form may also be retrieved from the cache if the form was built in a
   * previous page load. The form is then passed on for processing, validation,
   * and submission if there is proper input.
   *
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface|string $form_arg
   *   The value must be one of the following:
   *   - The name of a class that implements \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface.
   *   - An instance of a class that implements \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface.
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface $form_state
   *   The current state of the form.
   *
   * @return array
   *   The rendered form. This function may also perform a redirect and hence
   *   may not return at all depending upon the $form_state flags that were set.
   *
   * @throws \Drupal\Core\Form\FormAjaxException
   *   Thrown when a form is triggered via an AJAX submission. It will be
   *   handled by \Drupal\Core\Form\EventSubscriber\FormAjaxSubscriber.
   * @throws \Drupal\Core\Form\EnforcedResponseException
   *   Thrown when a form builder returns a response directly, usually a
   *   \Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\RedirectResponse. It will be handled by
   *   \Drupal\Core\EventSubscriber\EnforcedFormResponseSubscriber.
   *
   * @see self::redirectForm()
   */
  public function buildForm($form_arg, FormStateInterface &$form_state);

  /**
   * Constructs a new $form from the information in $form_state.
   *
   * This is the key function for making multi-step forms advance from step to
   * step. It is called by self::processForm() when all user input processing,
   * including calling validation and submission handlers, for the request is
   * finished. If a validate or submit handler set $form_state->isRebuilding()
   * to TRUE, and if other conditions don't preempt a rebuild from happening,
   * then this function is called to generate a new $form, the next step in the
   * form workflow, to be returned for rendering.
   *
   * Ajax form submissions are almost always multi-step workflows, so that is
   * one common use-case during which form rebuilding occurs.
   *
   * @param string $form_id
   *   The unique string identifying the desired form. If a function with that
   *   name exists, it is called to build the form array.
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface $form_state
   *   The current state of the form.
   * @param array|null $old_form
   *   (optional) A previously built $form. Used to retain the #build_id and
   *   #action properties in Ajax callbacks and similar partial form rebuilds.
   *   The only properties copied from $old_form are the ones which both exist
   *   in $old_form and for which $form_state->getRebuildInfo()['copy'][PROPERTY]
   *   is TRUE. If $old_form is not passed, the entire $form is rebuilt freshly.
   *   'rebuild_info' needs to be a separate top-level property next to
   *   'build_info', since the contained data must not be cached.
   *
   * @return array
   *   The newly built form.
   *
   * @see self::processForm()
   */
  public function rebuildForm($form_id, FormStateInterface &$form_state, $old_form = NULL);

  /**
   * Retrieves, populates, and processes a form.
   *
   * This function allows you to supply values for form elements and submit a
   * form for processing. Compare to self::getForm(), which also builds and
   * processes a form, but does not allow you to supply values.
   *
   * There is no return value, but you can check to see if there are errors
   * by calling $form_state->getErrors().
   *
   * For example:
   * @code
   * // Set the administrator role to 'content_editor'.
   * $values['user_admin_role'] = 'content_editor';
   * $form_state = new FormState();
   * $form_state->setValues($values);
   * \Drupal::formBuilder()->submitForm(RoleSettingsForm::class, $form_state);
   * @endcode
   *
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface|string $form_arg
   *   The value must be one of the following:
   *   - The name of a class that implements \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface.
   *   - An instance of a class that implements \Drupal\Core\Form\FormInterface.
   * @param $form_state
   *   The current state of the form. Most important is the
   *   $form_state->getValues() collection, a tree of data used to simulate the
   *   incoming \Drupal::request()->request information from a user's form
   *   submission. If a key is not filled in $form_state->getValues(), then the
   *   default value of the respective element is used. To submit an unchecked
   *   checkbox or other control that browsers submit by not having a
   *   \Drupal::request()->request entry, include the key, but set the value to
   *   NULL.
   * @param ...
   *   Any additional arguments are passed on to the functions called by
   *   self::submitForm(), including the unique form constructor function.
   *   For example, the node_edit form requires that a node object be passed
   *   in here when it is called. Arguments that need to be passed by reference
   *   should not be included here, but rather placed directly in the
   *   $form_state build info array so that the reference can be preserved. For
   *   example, a form builder function with the following signature:
   *   @code
   *   function mymodule_form($form, FormStateInterface &$form_state, &$object) {
   *   }
   *   @endcode
   *   would be called via self::submitForm() as follows:
   *   @code
   *   $form_state->setValues($my_form_values);
   *   $form_state->addBuildInfo('args', [&$object]);
   *   \Drupal::formBuilder()->submitForm('mymodule_form', $form_state);
   *   @endcode
   */
  public function submitForm($form_arg, FormStateInterface &$form_state);

  /**
   * Retrieves the structured array that defines a given form.
   *
   * @param string $form_id
   *   The unique string identifying the desired form. If a function
   *   with that name exists, it is called to build the form array.
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface $form_state
   *   The current state of the form, including the additional arguments to
   *   self::getForm() or self::submitForm() in the 'args' component of the
   *   array.
   *
   * @return mixed|\Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response
   */
  public function retrieveForm($form_id, FormStateInterface &$form_state);

  /**
   * Processes a form submission.
   *
   * This function is the heart of form API. The form gets built, validated and
   * in appropriate cases, submitted and rebuilt.
   *
   * @param string $form_id
   *   The unique string identifying the current form.
   * @param array $form
   *   An associative array containing the structure of the form.
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface $form_state
   *   The current state of the form. This includes the current persistent
   *   storage data for the form, and any data passed along by earlier steps
   *   when displaying a multi-step form. Additional information, like the
   *   sanitized \Drupal::request()->request data, is also accumulated here.
   *
   * @return \Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\RedirectResponse|null
   */
  public function processForm($form_id, &$form, FormStateInterface &$form_state);

  /**
   * Prepares a structured form array.
   *
   * Adds required elements, executes any hook_form_alter functions, and
   * optionally inserts a validation token to prevent tampering.
   *
   * @param string $form_id
   *   A unique string identifying the form for validation, submission,
   *   theming, and hook_form_alter functions.
   * @param array $form
   *   An associative array containing the structure of the form.
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface $form_state
   *   The current state of the form. Passed in here so that hook_form_alter()
   *   calls can use it, as well.
   */
  public function prepareForm($form_id, &$form, FormStateInterface &$form_state);

  /**
   * Builds and processes all elements in the structured form array.
   *
   * Adds any required properties to each element, maps the incoming input data
   * to the proper elements, and executes any #process handlers attached to a
   * specific element.
   *
   * This is one of the three primary functions that recursively iterates a form
   * array. This one does it for completing the form building process. The other
   * two are self::doValidateForm() (invoked via self::validateForm() and used
   * to invoke validation logic for each element) and
   * RendererInterface::render() (for rendering each element).
   * Each of these three pipelines provides ample opportunity for modules to
   * customize what happens. For example, during this function's life cycle,
   * the following functions get called for each element:
   * - $element['#value_callback']: A callable that implements how user input is
   *   mapped to an element's #value property. This defaults to a function named
   *   'form_type_TYPE_value' where TYPE is $element['#type'].
   * - $element['#process']: An array of functions called after user input has
   *   been mapped to the element's #value property. These functions can be used
   *   to dynamically add child elements: for example, for the 'date' element
   *   type, one of the functions in this array is form_process_datetime(),
   *   which adds the individual 'date', and 'time'. child elements. These
   *   functions can also be used to set additional properties or implement
   *   special logic other than adding child elements: for example, for the
   *   'details' element type, one of the functions in this array is
   *   form_process_details(), which adds the attributes and JavaScript needed
   *   to make the details work in older browsers. The #process functions are
   *   called in preorder traversal, meaning they are called for the parent
   *   element first, then for the child elements.
   * - $element['#after_build']: An array of callables called after
   *   self::doBuildForm() is done with its processing of the element. These are
   *   called in postorder traversal, meaning they are called for the child
   *   elements first, then for the parent element.
   * There are similar properties containing callback functions invoked by
   * self::doValidateForm() and RendererInterface::render(),
   * appropriate for those operations.
   *
   * Developers are strongly encouraged to integrate the functionality needed by
   * their form or module within one of these three pipelines, using the
   * appropriate callback property, rather than implementing their own recursive
   * traversal of a form array. This facilitates proper integration between
   * multiple modules. For example, module developers are familiar with the
   * relative order in which hook_form_alter() implementations and #process
   * functions run. A custom traversal function that affects the building of a
   * form is likely to not integrate with hook_form_alter() and #process in the
   * expected way. Also, deep recursion within PHP is both slow and memory
   * intensive, so it is best to minimize how often it's done.
   *
   * As stated above, each element's #process functions are executed after its
   * #value has been set. This enables those functions to execute conditional
   * logic based on the current value. However, all of self::doBuildForm() runs
   * before self::validateForm() is called, so during #process function
   * execution, the element's #value has not yet been validated, so any code
   * that requires validated values must reside within a submit handler.
   *
   * As a security measure, user input is used for an element's #value only if
   * the element exists within $form, is not disabled (as per the #disabled
   * property), and can be accessed (as per the #access property, except that
   * forms submitted using self::submitForm() bypass #access restrictions). When
   * user input is ignored due to #disabled and #access restrictions, the
   * element's default value is used.
   *
   * Because of the preorder traversal, where #process functions of an element
   * run before user input for its child elements is processed, and because of
   * the Form API security of user input processing with respect to #access and
   * #disabled described above, this generally means that #process functions
   * should not use an element's (unvalidated) #value to affect the #disabled or
   * #access of child elements. Use-cases where a developer may be tempted to
   * implement such conditional logic usually fall into one of two categories:
   * - Where user input from the current submission must affect the structure of
   *   a form, including properties like #access and #disabled that affect how
   *   the next submission needs to be processed, a multi-step workflow is
   *   needed. This is most commonly implemented with a submit handler setting
   *   persistent data within $form_state based on *validated* values in
   *   $form_state->getValues() and checking $form_state->isRebuilding(). The
   *   form building functions must then be implemented to use the $form_state
   *   to rebuild the form with the structure appropriate for the new state.
   * - Where user input must affect the rendering of the form without affecting
   *   its structure, the necessary conditional rendering logic should reside
   *   within functions that run during the rendering phase (#pre_render,
   *   #theme, #theme_wrappers, and #post_render).
   *
   * @param string $form_id
   *   A unique string identifying the form for validation, submission,
   *   theming, and hook_form_alter functions.
   * @param array $element
   *   An associative array containing the structure of the current element.
   * @param \Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface $form_state
   *   The current state of the form. In this context, it is used to accumulate
   *   information about which button was clicked when the form was submitted,
   *   as well as the sanitized \Drupal::request()->request data.
   *
   * @return array
   */
  public function doBuildForm($form_id, &$element, FormStateInterface &$form_state);

}

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