I would like to use Dijit elements that are not included into Zend Framework. But I don't know how I should go around it :
$subPrice = new Zend_Dojo_Form_SubForm('priceTab');
$subPrice->setLegend('Tarification :');
$sign = new Zend_Dojo_Form_Decorator_DijitElement('sign');
$sign->setDijitParams(array('dojoType' => 'dijit.form.ToggleButton',
'label' => '-',
'showLabel' => true,
'checked' => true,
'onChange' => 'toggleLabel(val)'
));
$subPrice->addElement($sign);
In my view I just added dojo.require("dijit.form.Button"); in the javascript
However I get this error message from the addElementfunction :
Fatal error: Call to a member function getOrder() on a non-object in D:\www\tuto\library\Zend\Form.php on line 1055
Any help would be extremely appreciated.
Thanks !
Related
I've got very big trouble with custom operations in Laravel backpack.
The documentated setup is clear but lack a real exemple with a form.
In my case I wanted to use the form engine to create a form for a relationship.
First step I did this :
public function getProtocoleForm($id)
{
// Config base
$this->crud->hasAccessOrFail('update');
$this->crud->setOperation('protocole');
//
$this->crud->addFields([
[ 'name' => 'codeCim',
'type' => 'text',
'label' => 'Code CIM',
],
]);
$this->crud->addSaveAction([
'name' => 'save_action_protocole',
'visible' => function($crud) {
return true;
},
'button_text' => 'Ajouter le procotole',
'redirect' => function($crud, $request, $itemId) {
return $crud->route;
},
]);
// get the info for that entry
$this->data['entry'] = $this->crud->getEntry($id);
$this->data['crud'] = $this->crud;
$this->data['saveAction'] = $this->crud->getSaveAction();
$this->data['title'] = 'Protocole ' . $this->crud->entity_name;
return view('vendor.backpack.crud.protocoleform', $this->data);
}
This is working fine, the form appears on the screen, then I did a setup for a post route like this :
Route::post($segment . '/{id}/protocolestore', [
'as' => $routeName . '.protocolestore',
'uses' => $controller . '#storeProtocole',
'operation' => 'protocole',
]);
The route appears correctly when I execute the artisan command but the storeProtocole function is never called. I checked the generated HTML and the form action is correct and checking in the "network" panel of the browser is also targeting the correct route.
Can you help me and tell me where I missed something ?
[Quick update] I made a mistake, the form route is not good in the HTML, it takes the route of the main controller.
I've been asked to add some Google event tracking to a link on a site I'm 'fixing'.
This relies on the 'onclick' attribute and the ZEND framework (1.11.11) application seems to generate those links as described below.
I can't find out how to add custom attributes to this function, specifically, 'onclick'.
Is this even possible? I've never got along with Zend and any gurus out there will probably know far better than I if it's even possible.
/**
* #return Zend_Navigation_Page_Uri
*/
public function getBrochurePageUri()
{
return new Zend_Navigation_Page_Uri(array(
'label' => 'Brochure request',
'uri' => 'http://www.website.com/brochure/'
)
);
}
try adding the following:
'attribs' => array('onclick'=>'somefunction(params)')
resulting in the following:
return new Zend_Navigation_Page_Uri(array(
'label' => 'Brochure request',
'uri' => 'http://www.website.com/brochure/',
'attribs' => array('onclick'=>'somefunction(params)')
)
);
$tip->setGame($em->getRepository('XXXBundle:Game')->find($id));
$form = $this->createFormBuilder($tip)->add('player', 'entity', array(
'class' => 'XXXBundle::FootballPlayer',
/*'query_builder' => function(\XXX\XXXBundle\Entity\FootballPlayerRepository $er)
{
$er->findByCurteam($team->getName());
},*/
))->getForm();
(not really using 'XXX' in my code)
error:
Warning: class_parents(): Class XXX\XXXBundle\Entity\ does not exist
and could not be loaded in
D:\www\xxx\xxx\vendor\doctrine\lib\Doctrine\ORM\Mapping\ClassMetadataFactory.php
line 223
seems the Entity class is not found - strange
Something is strange in your code: 'class' => 'XXXBundle::FootballPlayer', are you sure :: exist? Never seen it, seems like a mistake (maybe can provoke the error).
After testing, yes, it's because of the double :: replace by :: 'class' => 'XXXBundle:FootballPlayer',.
I am developping a web application using Zend and I ran out of ideas for a problem I am having. In just a few words, I am trying to have a contact form in a popup (Fancybox, lightbox, colorbox or whatever...). The whole thing works fine, in the sense that it shows up the contact form in the popup and allows to send emails. However, whenever there are errors (unfilled input or filled wrong), I couldn't get those errors to be displayed on the popup (it actually redirects me back to the form in a normal display (view+layout), to show the errors.
It is perhaps possible but I now thought that perhaps I could more easily bring my error message to a new popup (the contact page, filled unproperly, would lead to a error popup page...). I think this alternative could look cool but am having real trouble doing it. Now my real question is : Can we really make a form on a popup, using Facybox (Lighbox or any other actually ... just want my popup) and Zend? Any Guru outhere??
Thanks a lot
here is the code:
the link for instance:
<a class="popLink" href=" <?php echo $this->url(array('module'=>'default', 'controller'=>'contact', 'action'=>'sendmail')).'?ProID='.$this->proProfil->getProID(); ?>">Contact</a>
the action:
public function sendmailAction()
{
$this->_helper->layout()->setLayout('blank');
$request = $this->getRequest();
$proID = $this->_getParam("ProID");
$professionalsList = new Model_DirPro();
$proName = $professionalsList->getProInfo($proID);
$translate = Zend_Registry::get('translate');
Zend_Validate_Abstract::setDefaultTranslator($translate);
Zend_Form::setDefaultTranslator($translate);
$contactform = new Form_ContactForm();
$contactform->setTranslator($translate);
$contactform->setAttrib('id', 'contact');
$this->view->contactform = $contactform;
$this->view->proName = $proName;
if ($request->isPost()){
if ($contactform->isValid($this->_getAllParams())){
$mailSubject = $contactform->getValue('mailsubject');
if ($contactform->mailattcht->isUploaded()) {
$contactform->mailattcht->receive();
//etc....
the form:
class Form_ContactForm extends Zend_Form
{
public function init ()
{
$this->setName("email");
$this->setMethod('post');
$this->addElement('text', 'mailsubject',
array('filters' => array('StringTrim'),
'validators' => array(), 'required' => true, 'label' => 'Subject:'));
$mailattcht = new Zend_Form_Element_File('mailattcht');
$mailattcht->setLabel('Attach File:')->setDestination(APPLICATION_PATH.'/../public/mails');
$mailattcht->addValidator('Count', false, 1);
$mailattcht->addValidator('Size', false, 8000000);
$mailattcht->addValidator('Extension', false,
'jpg,png,gif,ppt,pptx,doc,docx,xls,xslx,pdf');
$this->addElement($mailattcht, 'mailattcht');
$this->addElement('textarea', 'mailbody',
array('filters' => array('StringTrim'),
'validators' => array(), 'required' => true, 'label' => 'Body:'));
$this->addElement('submit', 'send',
array('required' => false, 'ignore' => true, 'label' => 'Send'));
$this->addElement('hidden', 'return', array(
'value' => Zend_Controller_Front::getInstance()->getRequest()->getRequestUri(),
));
$this->setAttrib('enctype', 'multipart/form-data');
}
}
I would suggest implementing AJAX validation. This would allow for the form to be verified before it is submitted. ZendCasts has a good tutorial on how to accomplish this: http://www.zendcasts.com/ajaxify-your-zend_form-validation-with-jquery/2010/04/
Ajax requests are handled via the contextSwitch action helper. You can to specify the various contexts an action needs to handle (xml or json) in the init method of the controller as follows:
public function init()
{
$this->_helper->contextSwitch()
->addActionContext('send-mail', 'json')
->initContext()
;
}
The request url should contain a "format=json" appended to the query string. This will execute the action and send the response in json format. The default behaviour of JSON context is to extract all the public properties of the view and encode them as JSON. Further details can be found here http://framework.zend.com/manual/en/zend.controller.actionhelpers.html
I found a "probably not the prettiest" working solution, it is to indeed use ajax as mentioned in the previous zendcast for validation to stop the real validation (preventdefault), process the data return the result and if everything's ok restart it.
ZF 1.11.2
I've tried most of the syntaxes. They didn't click.
$validators = array('product_name' => array('alnum'));
//...
$input = new Zend_Filter_Input($filters, $validators, $_POST);
How in the world do you set a custom error message for alnum with the syntax above? Using 'messages' => array('Not alnum!!')? Yeah, well... How? I must've tried 100 nested arrays.
Use the built in translator.
For example, configure the translator in your config file to use a simple array
; Translations
resources.translate.data = APPLICATION_PATH "/lang"
resources.translate.adapter = "Array"
resources.translate.options.scan = "directory"
resources.translate.options.disableNotices = "1"
This tells the Translate application resource plugin that you want to
keep your translations under APPLICATION_PATH/lang
use the Array adapter (simplest)
scan the translation directory for languages / locales
ignore errors about unknown translations (ie user preferes en_AU but you don't have a specific translation file for that language)
Now, create folders for any languages you want to support. At a minimum, you'll want application/lang/en. For example
application
lang
en
en_AU
en_US
In each language folder, create a translate.php file. This file will contain (and return) an array of key / value pairs for each translation. You can find the keys for each validator message in the validator class. Here's an example for the Alnum validator
<?php
// application/lang/en/translate.php
return array(
Zend_Validate_Alnum::NOT_ALNUM => 'Not alnum!!',
Zend_Validate_Alnum::INVALID => 'Not valid!!'
);
For all Zend validators, you can also use the %value% placeholder in your message, eg
Zend_Validate_Alnum::NOT_ALNUM => "'%value%' is not alpha-numeric"
If you are simply trying to change the validation messages for a form element, I have always done it like this (inside a class that extends Zend_Form):
$this->addElement('text', 'myTextField', array(
'label' => 'The Label',
'description' => 'The description for the field...',
'filters' => array(
'StringTrim',
// etc
),
'validators' => array(
array('NotEmpty', true, array(
'messages' => 'This field is required',
)),
array('AnotherValidator', true, array(
'messages' => 'Bad value',
)),
// etc
),
));
Are you saying that this didn't work? Or are you using your validator in a more general context, in which case #Phil Brown's (awesome!) answer will do the job.
Disabling the translator on the element will disable the translation of all the validator messages. It is not possible to use a translator on the form or element and overwrite just one validator message. When the element is validated the translator is injected to every validator. The validator will use the translator if it is set. Thereby the custom error message won't be used.
Zend_Validate_Abstract::_createMessage()
// $message is your custom error message
$message = $this->_messageTemplates[$messageKey];
if (null !== ($translator = $this->getTranslator())) {
// your custom error message gets overwritten because the messageKey can be translated
if ($translator->isTranslated($messageKey)) {
$message = $translator->translate($messageKey);
} else {
$message = $translator->translate($message);
}
}
I think it is only possible to use a custom error message by disable the translator on the element.
$element->setDisableTranslator(true)
Use setMessage and disable translator if you have one.
$alnum = new Zend_Validate_Alnum();
$alnum->setDisableTranslator(true);
$alnum->setMessage(
'Not alnum!!',
Zend_Validate_Alnum::NOT_ALNUM
);
$validators = array('product_name' => array($alnum));
If you use your validator on a form element, you have to disable the translator on the element.