A form library with a focus on simplicity
Project description
Yota
Yota is a Python form generation library with the following unique features:
Easy integration of realtime validation. Trigger a server side form validation with any JavaScript event on your input fields. (Client side in planning)
Dynamic form structures allow for complex forms with on the fly changes. Inject different input fields or validation methods into a specific instance of your Form where needed.
Default themed with Bootstrap, allowing you to quickly throw together useful forms that look nice.
In addition to these features, Yota also includes most of the features that you would see with other form libraries.
Simple declarative syntax for defining form validation and layout
Customizable template driven schemas
Ability to operate with almost any framework and use any rendering engine. (Default is jinja2)
Philosophically Yota aims to have a ton of power, since designing Forms can require a lot of flexibility. This was the main problem the designers had with other libraries is that they ended up getting in the way. At the same time however it is important that sensible default be easy to use and implement, making the creation of common forms trivial and lowering the inital learning curve.
Note: Release of 0.2 has made changes that will minorly break reverse compatibility. This should be the last time as this code base is maturing, but be cautious if upgrading any production code to the latest release.
Getting Started
Yota currently provides standard documentation (although is still lacking in some areas) at [ReadTheDocs](https://yota.readthedocs.org/en/latest/).
### [Documentation](https://yota.readthedocs.org/en/latest/)
Example uses in Flask and Django are currently availible in the [Yota Examples](https://github.com/icook/yota_examples>) repository.
### [Examples Repository](https://github.com/icook/yota_examples>)
You can also view our examples live [here](http://64.49.234.90/yota_example).
### [Live Demo](http://64.49.234.90/yota_example)
Get Involved
Any and all contributions to Yota are gladly welcomed. Simply fork the repository and make a pull request with your addition or open an issue for the maintainers to consider. If you’re looking to help out, there are several tickets tagged with “maintinance” that can be completed. Adding yourself to the CONTRIBUTORS.txt list when making a pull request is also encouraged.
Latest Changes
0.2.0 (2013-06-28)
### Features
Added some more built-in Nodes and Validators such as StrongPasswordValidator, MatchingValidator, RegexValidator, CheckboxNode, etc.
Refactored all validation functions to return both a success bool value alongside its output, making post-validation logic more clear and concise.
### Refactor for Client Side Funcionality
Completely re-wrote the JavaScript library into a jQuery plugin.
Moved the selection loigc for Nodes that are “ready” to be validated into server side, incurring marginal overheads.
Changed the error_render call semantics to track which Nodes have errors and intelligently call the function.
Improved error rendering to support multiple errors.
Re-designed the semantic which finds the HTML node in which to place errors on a per Node basis. json_identifiers function now passes these details to the client side code allowing more flexible rendering.
Allowed per-Node logic for deciding if the Node is ready to be validated based on a list of visited Nodes.
Added a more robust render_success method that allows passing arbitrary information to drive things like redirects, etc.
### Documentation
Large expansions in the documentation in almost all areas. More should be coming steadily in the next few weeks.
Re-wrote the yota_examples repository for improved clarity and commenting.
### Maintenance/Stability
Introduced simple functional tests to attempt coverage for behaviour that cannot be unit tested
Added commenting and specificity to existing unit tests
Added more unit tests to regain near 100% coverage. Touch ups to come soon.
Installation
Yota has no dependencies on other libraries or packages except for its rendering engine. To install Yota just do:
pip install yota jinja2
Or you can install it from Git with:
git clone https://github.com/icook/yota.git
cd yota
pip install .
pip install jinja2
License
Yota is under the new-style BSD license.
Project details
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