Field

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The Field component is how you connect each individual input to the Redux store. There are three fundamental things that you need to understand in order to use Field correctly:

  1. The name prop is required. It is a string path, in dot-and-bracket notation, corresponding to a value in the form values. It may be as simple as 'firstName' or as complicated as contact.billing.address[2].phones[1].areaCode.

  2. The component prop is required. It may be a Component, a stateless function, or string name of one of the default supported DOM inputs (input, textarea or select), See Usage section below. To learn about the props that will provided to whatever your component is, see the Props section below.

  3. All other props will be passed along to the element generated by the component prop.

Importing


var Field = require('redux-form').Field;  // ES5

import { Field } from 'redux-form';  // ES6

Props you can pass to Field

name : String [required]

A string path, in dot-and-bracket notation, corresponding to a value in the form values. It may be as simple as 'firstName' or as complicated as contact.billing.address[2].phones[1].areaCode. See the Usage section below for details.

component : Component|Function|String [required]

A Component, stateless function, or string corresponding to a default JSX element. See the Usage section below for details.

format : (value) => formattedValue [optional]

Formats the value from the Redux store to be displayed in the field input. Common use cases are to format Numbers into currencies or Dates into a localized date format.

normalize : (value, previousValue, allValues, previousAllValues) => nextValue [optional]

A function to convert whatever value the user has entered into the value that you want stored in the Redux store for the field. For instance, if you want the value to be in all uppercase, you would pass value => value.toUpperCase(). The parameters to your normalize function are:

value : any

The value entered by the user.

previousValue : any

The previous value for the field.

allValues : Object

All the values in the entire form with the new value. This will be an Immutable Map if you are using Immutable JS.

previousAllValues : Object

All the values in the entire form before the current change. This will be an Immutable Map if you are using Immutable JS.

props : object [optional]

Object with custom props to pass through the Field component into a component provided to component prop. This props will be merged to props provided by Field itself. This may be useful if you are using TypeScript. This construct is completely optional; the primary way of passing props along to your component is to give them directly to the Field component, but if, for whatever reason, you prefer to bundle them into a separate object, you may do so by passing them into props.

parse : (value) => parsedValue [optional]

Parses the value given from the field input component to the type that you want stored in the Redux store. Common use cases are to parse currencies into Numbers into currencies or localized date formats into Dates.

withRef : boolean [optional]

If true, the rendered component will be available with the getRenderedComponent() method. Defaults to false. Cannot be used if your component is a stateless function component.

Usage

The component prop will be passed to React.createElement(), which accepts one of three possible things:

1. A component

This can be any component class that you have written or have imported from a third party library.


// MyCustomInput.js
import React, { Component } from 'react'

class MyCustomInput extends Component {
  render() {
    const { input: { value, onChange } } = this.props
    return (
      <div>
        <span>The current value is {value}.</span>
        <button type="button" onClick={() => onChange(value + 1)}>Inc</button>
        <button type="button" onClick={() => onChange(value - 1)}>Dec</button>
      </div>
    )
  }
}

Then, somewhere in your form...


import MyCustomInput from './MyCustomInput'

...

<Field name="myField" component={MyCustomInput}/>

To learn what props will be passed to your component, see the Props section below.

2. A stateless function

This is the most flexible way to use <Field>, as it gives you complete control over how the input is rendered. It is especially useful for displaying validation errors. It will also be the most familiar to people migrating from previous versions of redux-form. You must define the stateless function outside of your render() method, or else it will be recreated on every render and will force the Field to rerender because its component prop will be different. If you are defining your stateless function inside of render(), it will not only be slower, but your input will lose focus whenever the entire form component rerenders.


// outside your render() method
const renderField = (field) => (
    <div className="input-row">
      <input {...field.input} type="text"/>
      {field.meta.touched && field.meta.error && 
       <span className="error">{field.meta.error}</span>}
    </div>
  )

// inside your render() method
<Field name="myField" component={renderField}/>

To learn what props will be passed to your stateless function, see the Props section below.

3. A string: input, select, or textarea

So all you really need to render an redux-form-connected text input is:


<Field component="input" type="text"/>

Remember the third rule above that all other props are passed to the element generated by component? So the type="text" prop will be given to the input.

Instance API

The following properties and methods are available on an instance of a Field component.

dirty : boolean

true if the current value is different from the initialized value, false otherwise.

name : String

The name prop that you passed in.

pristine : boolean

true if the current value is the same as the initialized value, false otherwise.

value : any

The current value of the field.

getRenderedComponent()

Returns the instance of the rendered component. For this to work, you must provide a withRef prop, and your component must not be a stateless function component.

####

Props

These are props that Field will pass to your wrapped component. The props provided by redux-form are divided into input and meta objects.

Any custom props passed to Field will be merged into the props object on the same level as the input and meta objects.

Input Props

The props under the input key are what connects your input component to Redux and are meant to be destructured into your <input/> component.

input.checked : boolean [optional]

An alias for value only when value is a boolean. Provided for convenience of destructuring the whole field object into the props of a form element.

input.name : String

The name prop passed in.

input.onBlur(eventOrValue) : Function

A function to call when the form field loses focus. It expects to either receive the React SyntheticEvent or the current value of the field.

input.onChange(eventOrValue) : Function

A function to call when the form field is changed. It expects to either receive the React SyntheticEvent or the new value of the field.

input.onDragStart(event) : Function

A function to call when the form field receives a dragStart event. Saves the field value in the event for giving the field it is dropped into.

input.onDrop(event) : Function

A function to call when the form field receives a drop event.

input.onFocus(event) : Function

A function to call when the form field receives focus.

input.value: any

The value of this form field. It will be a boolean for checkboxes, and a string for all other input types. If there is no value in the Redux state for this field, it will default to ''. This is to ensure that the input is controlled. If you require that the value be of another type (e.g. Date or Number), you must provide initialValues to your form with the desired type of this field.

Meta Props

The props under the meta key are metadata about the state of this field that redux-form is tracking for you.

meta.active : boolean

true if this field currently has focus. It will only work if you are passing onFocus to your input element.

meta.autofilled : boolean

true if this field has been set with the AUTOFILL action and has not since been changed with a CHANGE action. This is useful to render the field in a way that the user can tell that the value was autofilled for them.

meta.asyncValidating : boolean

true if the form is currently running asynchronous validation because this field was blurred.

meta.dirty : boolean

true if the field value has changed from its initialized value. Opposite of pristine.

meta.dispatch : Function

The Redux dispatch function.

meta.error : String [optional]

The error for this field if its value is not passing validation. Both synchronous, asynchronous, and submit validation errors will be reported here.

meta.invalid : boolean

true if the field value fails validation (has a validation error). Opposite of valid.

meta.pristine : boolean

true if the field value is the same as its initialized value. Opposite of dirty.

meta.submitting : boolean

true if the field is currently being submitted

meta.touched : boolean

true if the field has been touched. By default this will be set when the field is blurred.

meta.valid : boolean

true if the field value passes validation (has no validation errors). Opposite of invalid.

meta.visited: boolean

true if this field has ever had focus. It will only work if you are passing onFocus to your input element.