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  • Rank 110,734 (Top 3 %)
  • Language
    Objective-C
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 10 years ago
  • Updated about 9 years ago

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Repository Details

Dynamic forms for iPhone/iPad - iOS 6, 7 and later

BPForms

Build Status Pod Version Pod Platform Pod License

Dynamic forms for iPhone/iPad - iOS 6, 7 and later (inspired from BZGFormViewController).

Now integrated with the well known JVFloatLabeledTextField.

Forms design

How to get started

install via CocoaPods

platform :ios, '6.0'
pod 'BPForms'

Requirements

  • Xcode4 and above
  • iOS 6.0 or above

Architecture

Form

  • BPFormViewController

Cells

  • BPFormCell implements BPFormCellProtocol
    • BPFormInputCell - "abstract class" and base class for all input cells
      • BPFormInputTextFieldCell uses BPFormTextField
        • BPFormFloatInputTextFieldCell uses BPFormFloatLabelTextField
      • BPFormInputTextViewCell uses BPFormTextView
        • BPFormFloatInputTextViewCell uses BPFormFloatLabelTextView
    • BPFormButtonCell
  • BPFormInfoCell implements BPFormCellProtocol

Appearance

  • BPAppearance

Class Diagram

Check the detailed class diagram.

Dependencies

Demo

Go to /Example, run pod install, and run the target from BPFormsExample.xcworkspace

Usage

For any form you create, you should subclass BPFormViewController or just instantiate it.

Create an input cell

You can create simple input cells (BPFormInputTextFieldCell) or input cells where the label floats above the text value (BPFormFloatInputTextFieldCell - see screenshot).

Just set the properties you need and make sure you set the BPFormViewController instance as delegate for the textField. shouldChangeBlock is used to verify the data entered, so please add the verification code (see example).

BPFormFloatInputTextFieldCell *emailCell = [[BPFormFloatInputTextFieldCell alloc] init];
emailCell.textField.placeholder = @"Email";
emailCell.textField.delegate = self;
emailCell.customCellHeight = 50.0f;
emailCell.mandatory = YES;
emailCell.shouldChangeTextBlock =
        BPValidateBlockWithPatternAndMessage(
            @"[A-Z0-9a-z._%+-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\\.[A-Za-z]{2,4}",
            @"The email should look like [email protected]");

Create a button cell

BPFormButtonCell *signUpCell = [[BPFormButtonCell alloc] init];
signUpCell.button.backgroundColor = [UIColor blueColor];
[signUpCell.button setTitle:@"Sign Up" forState:UIControlStateNormal];
signUpCell.button.layer.cornerRadius = 4.0;
signUpCell.button.layer.masksToBounds = YES;
signUpCell.buttonActionBlock = ^(void){
    NSLog(@"Button pressed");
};

Add all the cells to the form controller

  • keep in mind formCells contains an array of sections, each sections with its cells
self.formCells = @[@[emailCell, passwordCell, password2Cell, nameCell, phoneCell], @[signUpCell]];

Add section header or footer

[self setHeaderTitle:@"Please enter your credentials" forSection:0];
[self setFooterTitle:@"When you're done, press <<Sign Up>>" forSection:0];

Tweak appearance

  • use the BPAppearance class to customize the way the forms look
// fonts
[BPAppearance sharedInstance].infoCellLabelFont = [UIFont systemFontOfSize:12];

// colors
[BPAppearance sharedInstance].headerFooterLabelTextColor = [UIColor lightGray];

// sizes
[BPAppearance sharedInstance].infoCellHeight = 25;

Author

License