public static function Checkbox::valueCallback in Drupal 9
Same name and namespace in other branches
- 8 core/lib/Drupal/Core/Render/Element/Checkbox.php \Drupal\Core\Render\Element\Checkbox::valueCallback()
Determines how user input is mapped to an element's #value property.
Parameters
array $element: An associative array containing the properties of the element.
mixed $input: The incoming input to populate the form element. If this is FALSE, the element's default value should be returned.
\Drupal\Core\Form\FormStateInterface $form_state: The current state of the form.
Return value
mixed The value to assign to the element.
Overrides FormElement::valueCallback
File
- core/
lib/ Drupal/ Core/ Render/ Element/ Checkbox.php, line 54
Class
- Checkbox
- Provides a form element for a single checkbox.
Namespace
Drupal\Core\Render\ElementCode
public static function valueCallback(&$element, $input, FormStateInterface $form_state) {
if ($input === FALSE) {
// Use #default_value as the default value of a checkbox, except change
// NULL to 0, because FormBuilder::handleInputElement() would otherwise
// replace NULL with empty string, but an empty string is a potentially
// valid value for a checked checkbox.
return isset($element['#default_value']) ? $element['#default_value'] : 0;
}
else {
// Checked checkboxes are submitted with a value (possibly '0' or ''):
// http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/interact/forms.html#successful-controls.
// For checked checkboxes, browsers submit the string version of
// #return_value, but we return the original #return_value. For unchecked
// checkboxes, browsers submit nothing at all, but
// FormBuilder::handleInputElement() detects this, and calls this
// function with $input=NULL. Returning NULL from a value callback means
// to use the default value, which is not what is wanted when an unchecked
// checkbox is submitted, so we use integer 0 as the value indicating an
// unchecked checkbox. Therefore, modules must not use integer 0 as a
// #return_value, as doing so results in the checkbox always being treated
// as unchecked. The string '0' is allowed for #return_value. The most
// common use-case for setting #return_value to either 0 or '0' is for the
// first option within a 0-indexed array of checkboxes, and for this,
// \Drupal\Core\Render\Element\Checkboxes::processCheckboxes() uses the
// string rather than the integer.
return isset($input) ? $element['#return_value'] : 0;
}
}