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onion/js/components/ascribe_forms/input_checkbox.js
2015-08-19 17:06:14 +02:00

118 lines
4.0 KiB
JavaScript

'use strict';
import React from 'react';
/**
* This component can be used as a custom input element for form properties.
* It exposes its state via state.value and can be considered as a reference implementation
* for custom input components that live inside of properties.
*/
let InputCheckbox = React.createClass({
propTypes: {
required: React.PropTypes.bool,
// As can be read here: https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/forms.html
// inputs of type="checkbox" define their state via checked.
// Their default state is defined via defaultChecked.
//
// Since this component even has checkbox in its name, it felt wrong to expose defaultValue
// as the default-setting prop to other developers, which is why we choose defaultChecked.
defaultChecked: React.PropTypes.bool,
children: React.PropTypes.oneOfType([
React.PropTypes.arrayOf(React.PropTypes.element),
React.PropTypes.element
]),
// provided by Property
disabled: React.PropTypes.bool,
onChange: React.PropTypes.func
},
// As HTML inputs, we're setting the default value for an input to checked === false
getDefaultProps() {
return {
defaultChecked: false
};
},
// Setting value to null in initialState is essentially since we're deriving a certain state from
// value === null as can be seen in componentWillReceiveProps.
getInitialState() {
return {
value: null
};
},
componentWillReceiveProps(nextProps) {
// Developer's are used to define defaultValues for inputs via defaultValue, but since this is a
// input of type checkbox we warn the dev to not do that.
if(this.props.defaultValue) {
console.warn('InputCheckbox is of type checkbox. Therefore its value is represented by checked and defaultChecked. defaultValue will do nothing!');
}
// The first time InputCheckbox is rendered, we want to set its value to the value of defaultChecked.
// This needs to be done in order to expose it for the Property component.
// We can determine the first render by checking if value still has it's initialState(from getInitialState)
if(this.state.value === null) {
this.setState({value: nextProps.defaultChecked });
}
},
onChange() {
// if this.props.disabled is true, we're just going to ignore every click,
// as the value should then not be changable by the user
if(this.props.disabled) {
return;
}
// On every change, we're inversing the input's value
let inverseValue = !this.refs.checkbox.getDOMNode().checked;
// pass it to the state
this.setState({value: inverseValue});
// and also call Property's onChange method
// (in this case we're mocking event.target.value, since we can not use the event
// coming from onChange. Its coming from the span (user is clicking on the span) and not the input)
this.props.onChange({
target: {
value: inverseValue
}
});
},
render() {
let style = {};
// Some conditional styling if the component is disabled
if(!this.props.disabled) {
style.cursor = 'pointer';
style.color = 'rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5)';
} else {
style.cursor = 'not-allowed';
style.color = 'rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.35)';
}
return (
<span
onClick={this.onChange}>
<input
type="checkbox"
ref="checkbox"
onChange={this.onChange}
checked={this.state.value}
defaultChecked={this.props.defaultChecked}/>
<span
className="checkbox"
style={style}>
{this.props.children}
</span>
</span>
);
}
});
export default InputCheckbox;