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257 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
257 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
Creating Forms
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==============
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ActiveRecord based forms: ActiveForm
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-----------------------
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The primary way of using forms in Yii is through [[yii\widgets\ActiveForm]]. This approach should be preferred when
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the form is based upon a model. Additionally, there are some useful methods in [[yii\helpers\Html]] that are typically
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used for adding buttons and help text to any form.
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A form, that is displayed on the client-side, will in most cases have a corresponding [model](structure-models.md) which is used
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to validate its input on the server-side (Check the [Validating Input](input-validation.md) section for more details on validation).
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When creating model-based forms, the first step is to define the model itself. The model can be either based upon
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an [Active Record](db-active-record.md) class, representing some data from the database, or a generic Model class
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(extending from [[yii\base\Model]]) to capture arbitrary input, for example a login form.
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> Tip: If the form fields are different from database columns or there are formatting and logic that is specific to that
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> form only, prefer creating a separate model extended from [[yii\base\Model]].
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In the following example, we show how a generic model can be used for a login form:
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```php
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<?php
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class LoginForm extends \yii\base\Model
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{
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public $username;
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public $password;
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public function rules()
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{
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return [
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// define validation rules here
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];
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}
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}
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```
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In the controller, we will pass an instance of that model to the view, wherein the [[yii\widgets\ActiveForm|ActiveForm]]
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widget is used to display the form:
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```php
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<?php
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use yii\helpers\Html;
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use yii\widgets\ActiveForm;
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$form = ActiveForm::begin([
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'id' => 'login-form',
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'options' => ['class' => 'form-horizontal'],
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]) ?>
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<?= $form->field($model, 'username') ?>
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<?= $form->field($model, 'password')->passwordInput() ?>
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<div class="form-group">
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<div class="col-lg-offset-1 col-lg-11">
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<?= Html::submitButton('Login', ['class' => 'btn btn-primary']) ?>
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</div>
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</div>
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<?php ActiveForm::end() ?>
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```
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### Wrapping with `begin()` and `end()` <span id="wrapping-with-begin-and-end"></span>
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In the above code, [[yii\widgets\ActiveForm::begin()|ActiveForm::begin()]] not only creates a form instance, but also marks the beginning of the form.
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All of the content placed between [[yii\widgets\ActiveForm::begin()|ActiveForm::begin()]] and
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[[yii\widgets\ActiveForm::end()|ActiveForm::end()]] will be wrapped within the HTML `<form>` tag.
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As with any widget, you can specify some options as to how the widget should be configured by passing an array to
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the `begin` method. In this case, an extra CSS class and identifying ID are passed to be used in the opening `<form>` tag.
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For all available options, please refer to the API documentation of [[yii\widgets\ActiveForm]].
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### ActiveField <span id="activefield"></span>
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In order to create a form element in the form, along with the element's label, and any applicable JavaScript validation,
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the [[yii\widgets\ActiveForm::field()|ActiveForm::field()]] method is called, which returns an instance of [[yii\widgets\ActiveField]].
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When the result of this method is echoed directly, the result is a regular (text) input.
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To customize the output, you can chain additional methods of [[yii\widgets\ActiveField|ActiveField]] to this call:
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```php
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// a password input
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<?= $form->field($model, 'password')->passwordInput() ?>
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// adding a hint and a customized label
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<?= $form->field($model, 'username')->textInput()->hint('Please enter your name')->label('Name') ?>
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// creating a HTML5 email input element
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<?= $form->field($model, 'email')->input('email') ?>
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```
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This will create all the `<label>`, `<input>` and other tags according to the [[yii\widgets\ActiveField::$template|template]] defined by the form field.
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The name of the input field is determined automatically from the model's [[yii\base\Model::formName()|form name]] and the attribute name.
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For example, the name for the input field for the `username` attribute in the above example will be `LoginForm[username]`. This naming rule will result in an array
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of all attributes for the login form to be available in `$_POST['LoginForm']` on the server-side.
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> Tip: If you have only one model in a form and want to simplify the input names you may skip the array part by
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> overriding the [[yii\base\Model::formName()|formName()]] method of the model to return an empty string.
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> This can be useful for filter models used in the [GridView](output-data-widgets.md#grid-view) to create nicer URLs.
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Specifying the attribute of the model can be done in more sophisticated ways. For example when an attribute may
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take an array value when uploading multiple files or selecting multiple items you may specify it by appending `[]`
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to the attribute name:
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```php
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// allow multiple files to be uploaded:
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echo $form->field($model, 'uploadFile[]')->fileInput(['multiple'=>'multiple']);
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// allow multiple items to be checked:
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echo $form->field($model, 'items[]')->checkboxList(['a' => 'Item A', 'b' => 'Item B', 'c' => 'Item C']);
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```
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Be careful when naming form elements such as submit buttons. According to the [jQuery documentation](https://api.jquery.com/submit/) there
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are some reserved names that can cause conflicts:
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> Forms and their child elements should not use input names or ids that conflict with properties of a form,
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> such as `submit`, `length`, or `method`. Name conflicts can cause confusing failures.
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> For a complete list of rules and to check your markup for these problems, see [DOMLint](https://kangax.github.io/domlint/).
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Additional HTML tags can be added to the form using plain HTML or using the methods from the [[yii\helpers\Html|Html]]-helper
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class like it is done in the above example with [[yii\helpers\Html::submitButton()|Html::submitButton()]].
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> Tip: If you are using Twitter Bootstrap CSS in your application you may want to use
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> [[yii\bootstrap\ActiveForm]] instead of [[yii\widgets\ActiveForm]]. The former extends from the latter and
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> uses Bootstrap-specific styles when generating form input fields.
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> Tip: In order to style required fields with asterisks, you can use the following CSS:
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>
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> ```css
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> div.required label.control-label:after {
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> content: " *";
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> color: red;
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> }
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> ```
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Creating Lists <span id="creating-activeform-lists"></span>
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-----------------------
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There are 3 types of lists:
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* Dropdown lists
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* Radio lists
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* Checkbox lists
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To create a list, you have to prepare the items. This can be done manually:
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```php
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$items = [
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1 => 'item 1',
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2 => 'item 2'
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]
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```
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or by retrieval from the DB:
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```php
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$items = Category::find()
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->select(['label'])
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->indexBy('id')
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->column();
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```
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These `$items` have to be processed by the different list widgets.
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The value of the form field (and the current active item) will be automatically set
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by the current value of the `$model`'s attribute.
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#### Creating a drop-down list <span id="creating-activeform-dropdownlist"></span>
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We can use ActiveField [[\yii\widgets\ActiveField::dropDownList()]] method to create a drop-down list:
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```php
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/* @var $form yii\widgets\ActiveForm */
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echo $form->field($model, 'category')->dropdownList([
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1 => 'item 1',
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2 => 'item 2'
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],
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['prompt'=>'Select Category']
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);
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```
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#### Creating a radio list <span id="creating-activeform-radioList"></span>
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We can use ActiveField [[\yii\widgets\ActiveField::radioList()]] method to create a radio list:
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```php
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/* @var $form yii\widgets\ActiveForm */
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echo $form->field($model, 'category')->radioList([
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1 => 'radio 1',
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2 => 'radio 2'
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]);
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```
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#### Creating a checkbox List <span id="creating-activeform-checkboxList"></span>
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We can use ActiveField [[\yii\widgets\ActiveField::checkboxList()]] method to create a checkbox list:
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```php
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/* @var $form yii\widgets\ActiveForm */
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echo $form->field($model, 'category')->checkboxList([
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1 => 'checkbox 1',
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2 => 'checkbox 2'
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]);
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```
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Working with Pjax <span id="working-with-pjax"></span>
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-----------------------
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The [[yii\widgets\Pjax|Pjax]] widget allows you to update a certain section of a
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page instead of reloading the entire page. You can use it to update only the form
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and replace its contents after the submission.
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You can configure [[yii\widgets\Pjax::$formSelector|$formSelector]] to specify
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which form submission may trigger pjax. If not set, all forms with `data-pjax`
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attribute within the enclosed content of Pjax will trigger pjax requests.
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```php
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use yii\widgets\Pjax;
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use yii\widgets\ActiveForm;
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Pjax::begin([
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// Pjax options
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]);
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$form = ActiveForm::begin([
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'options' => ['data' => ['pjax' => true]],
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// more ActiveForm options
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]);
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// ActiveForm content
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ActiveForm::end();
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Pjax::end();
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```
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> Tip: Be careful with the links inside the [[yii\widgets\Pjax|Pjax]] widget since
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> the response will also be rendered inside the widget. To prevent this, use the
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> `data-pjax="0"` HTML attribute.
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#### Values in Submit Buttons and File Upload
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There are known issues using `jQuery.serializeArray()` when dealing with
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[files](https://github.com/jquery/jquery/issues/2321) and
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[submit button values](https://github.com/jquery/jquery/issues/2321) which
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won't be solved and are instead deprecated in favor of the `FormData` class
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introduced in HTML5.
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That means the only official support for files and submit button values with
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ajax or using the [[yii\widgets\Pjax|Pjax]] widget depends on the
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[browser support](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/FormData#Browser_compatibility)
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for the `FormData` class.
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Further Reading <span id="further-reading"></span>
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---------------
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The next section [Validating Input](input-validation.md) handles the validation of the submitted form data on the server-side as well as ajax and client-side validation.
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To read about more complex usage of forms, you may want to check out the following sections:
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- [Collecting Tabular Input](input-tabular-input.md) for collecting data for multiple models of the same kind.
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- [Getting Data for Multiple Models](input-multiple-models.md) for handling multiple different models in the same form.
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- [Uploading Files](input-file-upload.md) on how to use forms for uploading files.
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