Directive that instantiates FormController.
If the name
attribute is specified, the form controller is published onto the current scope under this name.
ngForm
In Angular, forms can be nested. This means that the outer form is valid when all of the child forms are valid as well. However, browsers do not allow nesting of <form>
elements, so Angular provides the ngForm
directive, which behaves identically to form
but can be nested. Nested forms can be useful, for example, if the validity of a sub-group of controls needs to be determined.
ng-valid
is set if the form is valid.ng-invalid
is set if the form is invalid.ng-pending
is set if the form is pending.ng-pristine
is set if the form is pristine.ng-dirty
is set if the form is dirty.ng-submitted
is set if the form was submitted.Keep in mind that ngAnimate can detect each of these classes when added and removed.
Since the role of forms in client-side Angular applications is different than in classical roundtrip apps, it is desirable for the browser not to translate the form submission into a full page reload that sends the data to the server. Instead some javascript logic should be triggered to handle the form submission in an application-specific way.
For this reason, Angular prevents the default action (form submission to the server) unless the <form>
element has an action
attribute specified.
You can use one of the following two ways to specify what javascript method should be called when a form is submitted:
To prevent double execution of the handler, use only one of the ngSubmit or ngClick directives. This is because of the following form submission rules in the HTML specification:
ngSubmit
)ngClick
) and a submit handler on the enclosing form (ngSubmit
)Any pending ngModelOptions
changes will take place immediately when an enclosing form is submitted. Note that ngClick
events will occur before the model is updated. Use ngSubmit
to have access to the updated model.
Animations in ngForm are triggered when any of the associated CSS classes are added and removed. These classes are: .ng-pristine
, .ng-dirty
, .ng-invalid
and .ng-valid
as well as any other validations that are performed within the form. Animations in ngForm are similar to how they work in ngClass and animations can be hooked into using CSS transitions, keyframes as well as JS animations.
The following example shows a simple way to utilize CSS transitions to style a form element that has been rendered as invalid after it has been validated:
//be sure to include ngAnimate as a module to hook into more //advanced animations .my-form { transition:0.5s linear all; background: white; } .my-form.ng-invalid { background: red; color:white; }
<form [name="string"]> ... </form>
Param | Type | Details |
---|---|---|
name (optional) | string | Name of the form. If specified, the form controller will be published into related scope, under this name. |
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0.
https://code.angularjs.org/1.4.14/docs/api/ng/directive/form