@ng-formworks/daisyui
v18.0.0
Published
Angular ng-formworks - JSON Schema Form builder using DaisyUI
Downloads
21
Maintainers
Readme
@ng-formworks/daisyui
This module is a dependency of the ng-formworks project and is meant to work as a framework installation module for using DaisyUI 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.
Getting started
npm install @ng-formworks/core@latest @ng-formworks/cssframework@latest @ng-formworks/daisyui@latest
With YARN, run the following:
yarn add @ng-formworks/core@latest @ng-formworks/cssframework@latest @ng-formworks/daisyui@latest
Then import DaisyUIFrameworkModule
in your main application module if you want to use daisyui
UI, like this:
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { DaisyUIFrameworkModule } from '@ng-formworks/daisyui';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
@NgModule({
declarations: [ AppComponent ],
imports: [
DaisyUIFrameworkModule
],
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="daisyui"
[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 (if installed).daisyui
for DaisyUi.no-framework
for (plain HTML).
theme
is for the framework theme you want to use.
The possible values for this framework are:
daisyui_default
for the default theme.light
for the light theme.dark
for the dark theme.cupcake
for the cupcake theme.cmyk
for the cmyk theme.pastel
for the pastel theme.daisyui_leaf
for the leaf 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-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-theme="daisyui_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-theme
attribute selector for example:
[data-theme="daisyui_custom"] {
background-color: green;
font: 15px Arial, sans-serif;
.
.
.
}
[data-theme="daisyui_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:'daisyui_custom',text:'DaisyUi custom theme'})
}
Using default DaisyUI css class names
By default, the framework prefixes all standard DaisyUI class names with 'dui-' for example '.btn' will become '.dui-btn'. The standard names can be switched back without the 'dui-' prefix if need be. To switch opf the 'dui-' prefixing, the DUIOPTIONS token value needs to be provided with the classPrefix property set to false-see code snippet below. By default the classPrefix property is true.
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import {DUIOPTIONS, DaisyUIFrameworkModule } from '@ng-formworks/daisyui';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
@NgModule({
declarations: [ AppComponent ],
imports: [
DaisyUIFrameworkModule
],
providers: [
{ provide: DUIOPTIONS, useValue: {classPrefix:false} }
],
bootstrap: [ AppComponent ]
})
export class AppModule { }
Code scaffolding
Run ng generate component component-name --project @ng-formworks/daisyui
to generate a new component. You can also use ng generate directive|pipe|service|class|guard|interface|enum|module --project @ng-formworks/daisyui
.
Note: Don't forget to add
--project @ng-formworks/daisyui
or else it will be added to the default project in yourangular.json
file.
Build
Run ng build @ng-formworks/daisyui
to build the project. The build artifacts will be stored in the dist/
directory.
Running unit tests
Run ng test @ng-formworks/daisyui
to execute the unit tests via Karma.