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@ng-formworks/bootstrap5

v18.0.0

Published

Angular ng-formworks - JSON Schema Form builder using Bootstrap 5 UI

Downloads

23

Readme

@ng-formworks/bootstrap5

This module is a dependency of the ng-formworks project and is meant to work as a framework installation module for using Bootstrap 5 in the forms.

Getting started

If you are unfamiliar with with the ng-formworks project, it is highly recommended to first have a look at the @ng-formworks pages for examples, demos, options and documentation.

npm install @ng-formworks/core@latest @ng-formworks/cssframework@latest @ng-formworks/bootstrap5@latest

With YARN, run the following:

yarn add @ng-formworks/core@latest @ng-formworks/cssframework@latest @ng-formworks/bootstrap5@latest

Then import Bootstrap5FrameworkModule in your main application module if you want to use bootstrap5 UI, like this:

import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';

import { Bootstrap5FrameworkModule } from '@ng-formworks/bootstrap5';

import { AppComponent } from './app.component';

@NgModule({
  declarations: [ AppComponent ],
  imports: [
    Bootstrap5FrameworkModule
  ],
  providers: [],
  bootstrap: [ AppComponent ]
})
export class AppModule { }

For basic use, after loading JsonSchemaFormModule as described above, to display a form in your Angular component, simply add the following to your component's template:

<json-schema-form
  loadExternalAssets="true"
  [schema]="yourJsonSchema"
  framework="bootstrap-5"
  [theme]="yourTheme"
  (onSubmit)="yourOnSubmitFn($event)">
</json-schema-form>

Where schema is a valid JSON schema object, and onSubmit calls a function to process the submitted JSON form data. If you don't already have your own schemas, you can find a bunch of samples to test with in the demo/assets/example-schemas folder, as described above.

framework is for the template you want to use, the default value is no-framwork. The possible values are:

  • material-design for Material Design (if installed).
  • bootstrap-3 for Bootstrap 3 (if installed).
  • bootstrap-4 for Bootstrap 4 (if installed).
  • bootstrap-5 for Bootstrap 5.
  • daisyui for DaisyUi (if installed).
  • no-framework for (plain HTML).

theme is for the framework theme you want to use. The possible values for this framework are:

  • bootstrap5_default for the default theme.
  • light for the light theme.
  • dark for the dark theme.

the list of available themes can also be gotten using the FrameworkLibraryService(found in '@ng-formworks/core'):

getFrameworkThemes()

method

Custom theming

Custom theming can be achieved in two ways:

  • the simplest is to overwrite the default theme(or any other themes) with css rules: css changes can be made using the data-bs-theme attribute selector so for example to change the .btn class of the default theme, you would include the following rule in your application's styles
[data-bs-theme="bootstrap5_default"] .btn {
    border-radius: 1rem
}
  • the other method is to add a new theme: the first step will be to create the entire theme (see the specific frameworks underlying documentation for how this can be done) and have it use the data-bs-theme attribute selector for example:
[data-bs-theme="bootstrap5_custom"] {
    background-color: green;
    font: 15px Arial, sans-serif;
    .
    .
    .
}
[data-bs-theme="bootstrap5_custom"] .btn {
    border-color: coral;
    .
    .
    .
}

after making the css available, the theme will need to be registered using the
FrameworkLibraryService(found in '@ng-formworks/core'): for example

  constructor(
    .
    private frameworkLibrary: FrameworkLibraryService,
    .
    .
  ) { 

    frameworkLibrary.registerTheme({name:'bootstrap5_custom',text:'Bootstrap5 custom theme'})

  }

Framework assets

Framework assets are typically third party assets (mainly js and css files) that are loaded at runtime for the particular framework's styling and effects to activate. By default these assets are loaded from built in cdn urls. These assets can also be self hosted or loaded from different urls if need be. To use custom urls the following steps must be followed:

  • create a file called assets.json somewhere in your app src folder
  • edit the assets.json file so that it contains both 'stylesheets' and 'scripts' properties-ex:
{

    "stylesheets": [
      "http://some.domain/css/style1.css",
      "http://some.domain/css/style2.css",
      "localstyle.css",
      ...
      ],
    "scripts": [
      "http://some.domain/css/script1.js",
      "localscript.js",
      ...
    ]

}
  • adapt your apps angular.json assets config accordingly, for example:
	"projects": {
        "<your project name>": {
			...
            "architect": {
                "build": {
                    "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:browser",
                    "options": {
                        ...
                        "assets": [
                            ...
                            {
                                "glob": "assets.json",
                                "input": "src",
                                "output": "/assets/bootstrap-5"
                            },
                            {
                                "glob": "localstyle.css",
                                "input": "./some/path/to/framework/cssfolder/",
                                "output": "/assets/bootstrap-5/cssframework"
                            },
                            {
                                "glob": "localscript.js",
                                "input": "./some/path/to/framework/jsfolder/",
                                "output": "/assets/bootstrap-5/cssframework"
                            }
                        ],
						...

Note that relative asset urls will be assumed to reside under "/assets/bootstrap-5/cssframework" and the assets.json file must output to "/assets/bootstrap-5"

for convenince a default assets.json file is included for including the framework assets from the node_modules folder, this assumes that the third party libraries were installed locally with npm and that they will reside in the "/assets/bootstrap-5/cssframework" deployment folder. In this case, the following config can be used and adapted similar to above:

...
                        "assets": [
                            ...
                           {
                                "glob": "**/*",
                                "input": "./node_modules/@ng-formworks/bootstrap5/assets",
                                "output": "/assets/bootstrap-5"
                            },
                            {
                                "glob": "bootstrap.bundle.min.js",
                                "input": "./node_modules/bootstrap/dist/js/",
                                "output": "/assets/bootstrap-5/cssframework"
                            },
                            {
                                "glob": "bootstrap.min.css",
                                "input": "./node_modules/bootstrap/dist/css/",
                                "output": "/assets/bootstrap-5/cssframework"
                            }
                        ],

Code scaffolding

Run ng generate component component-name --project @ng-formworks/bootstrap5 to generate a new component. You can also use ng generate directive|pipe|service|class|guard|interface|enum|module --project @ng-formworks/bootstrap5.

Note: Don't forget to add --project @ng-formworks/bootstrap5 or else it will be added to the default project in your angular.json file.

Build

Run ng build @ng-formworks/bootstrap5 to build the project. The build artifacts will be stored in the dist/ directory.

Running unit tests

Run ng test @ng-formworks/bootstrap5 to execute the unit tests via Karma.