If you want to try it out, have a look at the demo page
Or deploy it on Scalingo in a single click on this button:
Scalingo offer a 1 month free trial then 7.20€ / month.
To run the formbuilder locally, you can issue the following commands:
$ git clone https://github.com/Kinto/formbuilder.git
$ cd formbuilder
$ npm install
$ npm run start
You also need to have a Kinto server greater than 4.3.1 in order to store your data and less than 11.0.0 for an out-of-the-box experience (when basicauth was removed by default). The latest version of Kinto at the time was 9.2.3. If you don't already have Kinto, follow the installation instructions. Also, see the changelog.
It's possible to configure a few things, using environment variables:
PROJECT_NAME
is the name of the project. Defaults to "formbuilder".SERVER_URL
is the URL of the kinto server. It's default value depends on the environment that's being used (development, production, etc.)
All the data generated by the formbuilder is stored in a Kinto instance. As such, you can request the data stored in there.
When you generate a form, you're actually generating two tokens:
- the adminToken, that you need to keep secret, giving you access to all the submitted data;
- the userToken, that's used by users to find back the proper form.
One interesting property of the userToken is that it is actually half of the admin token !
With that in mind, let's say we've generated a form with an adminToken of 152e3b0af1e14cb186894980ecac95de
. The userToken is then 152e3b0af1e14cb1
.
So if we want to have access to the data on the server, using curl, we need to authenticate as the admin (using BasicAuth with form:{adminToken}
):
$ SERVER_URL="http://localhost:8888/v1"
$ ADMIN_TOKEN="152e3b0af1e14cb186894980ecac95de"
$ FORM_ID="152e3b0af1e14cb1"
$ curl $SERVER_URL/buckets/formbuilder/collections/$FORM_ID/records \
-u form:$ADMIN_TOKEN | python -m json.tool
{
"data": [
{
"how_are_you_feeling_today": "I don't know",
"id": "7785a0bb-cf75-4da4-a757-faefb30e47ae",
"last_modified": 1464788211487,
"name": "Clark Kent"
},
{
"how_are_you_feeling_today": "Quite bad",
"id": "23b00a31-6acc-4ad2-894c-e208fb9d38bc",
"last_modified": 1464788201181,
"name": "Garfield"
},
{
"how_are_you_feeling_today": "Happy",
"id": "aedfb695-b22c-433d-a104-60a0cee8cb55",
"last_modified": 1464788192427,
"name": "Lucky Luke"
}
]
}
The formbuilder is based on top of React and the react-jsonschema-form (rjsf) library.
It is also using redux to handle the state and dispatch actions. If you're not familiar with it, don't worry, here is an explanation of how it works.
With react and redux, components are rendering themselves depending of some state. The state is passed to a component and becomes a set of props
.
States aren't all stored at the same place and are grouped in so called stores (which are containers for the different states).
Now, if one needs to update the props of a component, it will be done via an action.
An action will eventually trigger some changes to the state, by the way of reducers: they are simple functions which take a original state, an action and return a new version of the state.
Then, the state will be given to the components which will re-render with the new values. As all components don't want to have access to all stores, the mapping is defined in a "container".
Yeah, I know, it's a bunch of concepts to understand. Here is a short recap:
state : The state of the application. It's stored in different stores.
actions : triggered from the components, they usually do something and then are relayed to reducers in order to update the state.
reducers : Make the state of a store evolve depending a specified action
containers : Containers define which stores and actions should be available from a react component.
At the very root, there is an "App" component, which either:
- renders a "mainComponent"
- renders a sidebar (customisable), the notifications and a content (customisable)
It is useful to have such a root component for the styling of the application: header is always in place and the menu always remains at the same location as well, if there is a need for such a menu.
There are multiple "screens" that the user navigates into, which are summarized here.
This might not be completely up to date, but is here so you can grasp easily how things are put together in the project.
There is a Welcome
component which is rendered as a mainComponent.
<App>
<Welcome />
</App>
This is the "builder" part of the formbuilder.
On the left side, you have a FieldList component and on the right side you have the components. It's possible to dragndrop from the fieldlist to the form.
Each time a field is added to the form, the insertfield
action is called.
<App>
<Header />
<NotificationList />
<FieldList>
<Draggable />
<Draggable />
...
</FieldList />
<Form>
<EditableField>
<FieldPropertiesEditor /> or <SchemaField />
</EditableField>
<Droppable />
<Form />
</App>
The form is actually rendered by the rjsf library using a custom SchemaField, defined in components/builder/EditableField.js
.
Once the form is created, the user is shown the FormCreated view, with a checkbox on the left side. This has two links to the AdminView and the UserForm views.
<App>
<Header />
<NotificationContainer />
<Check />
<FormCreated />
</App>
The form admin is where the answers to the forms can be viewed. It should be viewable only by the people with the administration link.
<App>
<AdminView>
<CSVDownloader />
</AdminView>
</App>
The UserForm is what the people that will fill the form will see.
<App>
<UserForm>
</App>