You want to make a web form that submits structured data (XML/JSON).
xsd-forms generates a web form for you based on an xml schema (XSD) that has been annotated with some presentation information.
xsd-forms has been deployed to a freely available web service for your convenience and immediate testing.
The form is javascript/html only and performs all validation using javascript.
This project is written in Scala with a small amount of Java.
Status: Released to Maven Central
Xml schemas contain nearly everything we need for many web forms except for presentation information. Instead of seeking full separation of presentation from the data model (the xml schema) there are significant advantages in annotating the xsd itself according to a special schema to indicate presentation details. For one, refactoring is much easier without specialized IDE tooling that can read both our xsd and our presentation format.
Primary Use Case
- A developer needs to create a web form.
- The developer creates an annotated schema as per xsd-forms and generates pure html and javascript (no server side scripting).
- The developer links the form to a server side component that processes the submitted xml.
As the submitted xml is compliant with a schema, the xml can be unmarshalled by a tool (see jaxb, scalaxb, xsd.exe into schema generated objects. Consequently any change in the schema will be reflected by compilation errors in the processing code if a statically typed language is used (such as Java, Scala, C#, etc.).
The features of javascript libraries like http://jquery.com mean that generating an html/javascript form that on submit posts xml that is compliant with the schema is a viable approach. The resultant css/html/javascript can be plugged in to any web server and presentation aspects can be overriden using annotations on the schema, css overrides and custom jquery script (the ability to separate script from structure is a nice feature of jquery in this instance).
Generated Form | Annotated schema | Comment |
---|---|---|
Demo form | schema | Feature showcase |
Australian Census 2011 | schema | Based on the 2011 Australian Census form (pdf) |
AMSA Pollution report | schema |
Note. The examples work fine in the Chrome, Firefox and Internet Explorer 9 browsers (other browsers not tested yet). IE 9 will not display the above demos because they are sourced from htmlpreview.github.io which does not furnish the js with the appropriate mime-type. You can use the web service to display the demos succesfully for IE 9. IE is not being selenium tested yet but a SauceConnect job may be set up for that soon.
Probably not! xsd-forms only supports a subset of xsd features. It was enough work for me to get this far, believe me! Supported features are documented in another section below. Your options are:
- use an XSLT to translate xml to match your schema
- translate the xml using some standard parser (xpath expressions etc)
- generate classes from both schemas and write code to translate using the generated classes. This method gives you compile-time indications as the schemas change through time (and isn't change inevitable!). This is my preferred option.
These xsd features are supported:
- elements only, not attributes
- sequence, choice
- minOccurs, maxOccurs on elements or anonymous complex types
- extension of complex types
- restrictions by regex pattern, enumerations, ranges on numerics, maxLength, minLength, length
- base simple types: string, boolean, date, datetime, time, integer, decimal, int, short, long, positiveInteger, negativeInteger, nonPositiveInteger, nonNegativeInteger, double, float
- no explicit support for populating form fields (say from xml). xsd defaults will be honoured. JQuery overrides can be used to do custom initialization.
Bearing in mind the above restrictions, these features are supported:
- top level elements
- top level complex types
- top level simple types
- anonymous complex types
- anonymous complex content
- anonymous simple types
You need to make a schema using only the elements and types that are supported by xsd-forms. You can generate the form without adding any annotations at that point and it will use element names and such as defaults. A starter schema looks like this:
<xs:schema targetNamespace="http://org.moten.david/example"
xmlns="http://org.moten.david/example" xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
xmlns:i="http://moten.david.org/xsd-forms">
<xs:annotation i:numberItems="true">
<xs:appinfo>
<i:header><![CDATA[
<h2>Title of the form</h2>
]]></i:header>
<i:footer><![CDATA[
<p>Thanks for your time.</p>
]]></i:footer>
<i:extraImports><![CDATA[
<!-- more imports here -->
]]></i:extraImports>
<i:extraScript><![CDATA[
// extra script would go here
]]></i:extraScript>
<i:extraCss><![CDATA[
/* extra css would go here */
]]></i:extraCss>
</xs:appinfo>
</xs:annotation>
<xs:element name="name" type="xs:string">
<xs:annotation i:label="Full name" />
</xs:element>
</xs:schema>
Deploying this simple schema to the web service mentioned below gives you this form.
Every element in your schema optionally can have a contained <xs:annotation/> element. Place attributes on that element from the xsd-forms schema like below:
annotations-demo.xsd ---> form
For a full list of annotations and their meanings see the top of the file annotation.scala.
This is what the form from annotations-demo.xsd looks like:
A web service is available. At this service you can
- Submit a schema document to the service and receive a zip archive of the generated site.
- Submit a schema document and view the generated form
You need to have built everything once only:
mvn clean install
Then
cd xsd-forms-generator-webapp
mvn package jetty:run
Then go to http://localhost:8080 and fill in the form.
Add the following maven dependency to your pom.xml (you will need to have built the project from source so that the dependency is available in your local repository):
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.davidmoten.xsdforms</groupId>
<artifactId>xsd-forms-generator</artifactId>
<version>0.2.1</version>
</dependency>
and call
xsdForms.generateZip(..)
or
xsdForms.generateHtml(...)
or
xsdForms.generateDirectory(...)
<plugin>
<groupId>com.github.davidmoten.xsdforms</groupId>
<artifactId>xsd-forms-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>0.2.1</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>generate</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
<configuration>
<!-- schema location can be on classpath or file system. Classpath is checked first -->
<schema>/demo.xsd</schema>
</configuration>
</plugin>
Here is a demonstration using xsd-forms-maven-plugin.
The default generated form just displays the captured xml on the page under the submit button. You will likely want to post the generated xml to a web server or perhaps email the xml to an address. To do that just set extraScript to the script below to override the submit behaviour:
//for example, display the xml in an alert box
processXml = function (xml) {
alert(xml);
}
Yep. Use this extraScript (using xml2json.js):
//for example, display json in an alert box
processXml = function (xml) {
var result = toJson(xml);
//alert or you could do a jquery ajax call to submit to a web server
alert(result);
}
Easy, just use javascript (jquery) in the extraScript. For instance, building on the above example:
//override the appearance of first input box
$('#item-6-instance-1_1_1').css("background", "aqua");
//override the default value of first input box
$('#item-6-instance-1_1_1').val("bingo");
An alternative is to put your own css overrides in xsd-forms-overrides.css.
Use this extraScript:
//override the processXml function
processXml = function(xml) {
//do whatever you want here!!
};
Use this extraScript:
processXml = postXml('http://posttestserver456.com/post.php');
Or for more control use this extraScript and modify it:
//submit the xml to a web service using http post
processXml = function (xml) {
var data = new Object();
data.xml = xml;
//disable submit button
$('#submit').hide();
$.ajax({
type: 'POST',
url: 'http://posttestserver456.com/post.php',
data: data,
success:
function (dat,textStatus,jqXHR) {
$('#submit').hide();
},
error:
function (jqXHR,textStatus,errorThrown) {
alert(textStatus + '\n'+ errorThrown);
$('#submit').show();
},
async:false
});
}
Schema default values will be set but if you want to for instance restore a form so a user can edit it then you need to write the necessary javascript as in the above examples. Using javascript/jquery you can call web services or extract parameters from the current url to populate the form.
Yes. Just choose a different root element for each form.
The generated form should
- perform all schema defined validation (e.g. regex pattern checks etc)
- notify validation failures in a good practice way
- build schema compliant xml from the input fields
- not allow submission until all validation passes
- offer ui options for handling xs:choice
- offer ui options for handling xs:enumeration
- follow good practice presentation standards
- facilitate tweaking of presentation using css override on every element
- support small screen/large screen
- support common mobile platforms
The use case is
- Given an xml schema, generate html, javascript and css files that will capture input, perform validation and prepare an xml representation of the form detail compliant with the schema.
You need maven 3 installed and git binaries.
git clone https://github.com/davidmoten/xsd-forms.git
cd xsd-forms
mvn clean install
To run selenium tests (firefox, and chrome if setup):
mvn clean install -Dselenium=true
Disable the chrome driver:
-Dchrome=false
Disable the firefox driver:
-Dfirefox=false
If you have the chromedriver executable installed ensure it is on the $PATH. For example, on linux
export PATH=/opt/chromedriver:$PATH
where /opt/chromedriver is the directory containing the chromedriver executable.
cd xsd-forms-generator
mvn jetty:run
Then go to http://localhost:8080/demo-form.html.
cd xsd-forms-generator-webapp
mvn package jetty:run
Then go to http://localhost:8080/
- use jquery to insert clones of div blocks to model maxOccurs > 1
- demonstrate choice presentation options (inline and post, labelled and unlabelled)
- implement choice presentation options
- clean up generated jquery code
- improve presentation
- enable css override
- generate xml
- unit tests of form generation
- unit tests of form behaviour (selenium?) including xml schema compliance
- use templating instead of coding divs directly in scala?
- combine templating with css to make themes