SubmitType Field
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A submit button.
Rendered as | button submit tag |
Inherited options | |
Parent type | ButtonType |
Class | SubmitType |
The Submit button has an additional method isClicked() that lets you check whether this button was used to submit the form. This is especially useful when a form has multiple submit buttons:
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if ($form->get('save')->isClicked()) {
// ...
}
Inherited Options
attr
type: array
default: []
If you want to add extra attributes to the HTML representation of the button,
you can use attr
option. It's an associative array with HTML attribute
as a key. This can be useful when you need to set a custom class for the button:
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use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\SubmitType;
// ...
$builder->add('save', SubmitType::class, [
'attr' => ['class' => 'save'],
]);
disabled
type: boolean
default: false
If you don't want a user to be able to click a button, you can set the disabled option to true. It will not be possible to submit the form with this button, not even when bypassing the browser and sending a request manually, for example with cURL.
label
type: string
default: The label is "guessed" from the field name
Sets the label that will be displayed on the button. The label can also be directly set inside the template:
1
{{ form_widget(form.save, { 'label': 'Click me' }) }}
label_format
type: string
default: null
Configures the string used as the label of the field, in case the label
option was not set. This is useful when using
keyword translation messages.
If you're using keyword translation messages as labels, you often end up having
multiple keyword messages for the same label (e.g. profile_address_street
,
invoice_address_street
). This is because the label is built for each "path"
to a field. To avoid duplicated keyword messages, you can configure the label
format to a static value, like:
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// ...
$profileFormBuilder->add('address', AddressType::class, [
'label_format' => 'form.address.%name%',
]);
$invoiceFormBuilder->add('invoice', AddressType::class, [
'label_format' => 'form.address.%name%',
]);
This option is inherited by the child types. With the code above, the label of
the street
field of both forms will use the form.address.street
keyword
message.
Two variables are available in the label format:
%id%
-
A unique identifier for the field, consisting of the complete path to the
field and the field name (e.g.
profile_address_street
); %name%
-
The field name (e.g.
street
).
The default value (null
) results in a
"humanized" version of the field name.
Note
The label_format
option is evaluated in the form theme. Make sure to
update your templates in case you
customized form theming.
translation_domain
type: string
default: messages
This is the translation domain that will be used for any labels or options that are rendered for this button.
validation_groups
type: array
default: null
When your form contains multiple submit buttons, you can change the validation group based on the button which was used to submit the form. Imagine a registration form wizard with buttons to go to the previous or the next step:
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use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Core\Type\SubmitType;
// ...
$form = $this->createFormBuilder($user)
->add('previousStep', SubmitType::class, [
'validation_groups' => false,
])
->add('nextStep', SubmitType::class, [
'validation_groups' => ['Registration'],
])
->getForm();
The special false
ensures that no validation is performed when the previous
step button is clicked. When the second button is clicked, all constraints
from the "Registration" are validated.
See also
You can read more about this in How to Choose Validation Groups Based on the Submitted Data.
Form Variables
Variable | Type | Usage |
---|---|---|
clicked |
boolean |
Whether the button is clicked or not. |