AMP

amp-form

Description

Allows you to create forms to submit input fields in an AMP document.

 

Required Scripts

<script async custom-element="amp-form" src="https://cdn.ampproject.org/v0/amp-form-0.1.js"></script>

Usage

The amp-form extension allows you to create forms (<form>) to submit input fields in an AMP document. The amp-form extension also provides polyfills for some missing behaviors in browsers.

If you're submitting data in your form, your server endpoint must implement the requirements for CORS security.

Before creating a <form>, you must include the required script for the <amp-form> extension, otherwise your document will be invalid. If you're using input tags for purposes other than submitting their values (e.g., inputs not inside a <form>), you do not need to load the amp-form extension.



<form method="post"
    action-xhr="https://example.com/subscribe"    target="_top">
    <fieldset>
      <label>
        <span>Name:</span>
        <input type="text"
          name="name"
          required>
      </label>
      <br>
      <label>
        <span>Email:</span>
        <input type="email"
          name="email"
          required>
      </label>
      <br>
      <input type="submit"
        value="Subscribe">
    </fieldset>
    <div submit-success>
      <template type="amp-mustache">
        Subscription successful!
      </template>
    </div>
    <div submit-error>
      <template type="amp-mustache">
        Subscription failed!
      </template>
    </div>
  </form>
Otwórz ten fragment kodu w placu zabaw

Inputs and fields

Allowed

Not Allowed

(Relaxing some of these rules might be reconsidered in the future - please let us know if you require these and provide use cases).

For details on valid inputs and fields, see amp-form rules in the AMP validator specification.

Success and error response rendering

You can render success or error responses in your form by using amp-mustache, or success responses through data binding with amp-bind and the following response attributes:

To render responses with templating:

  • Apply a response attribute to any descendant of the <form> element.
  • Render the response in the child element by including a template via <template></template> or <script type="text/plain"></script> tag inside it or by referencing a template with a template="id_of_other_template" attribute.
  • Provide a valid JSON object for responses to submit-success and submit-error. Both success and error responses should have a Content-Type: application/json header.

When using <amp-form> in tandem with another templating AMP component, such as <amp-list>, note that templates may not nest in valid AMP documents. In this case a valid workaround is to provide the template by id via the template attribute. Learn more about nested templates in <amp-mustache>.

In the following example, the responses are rendered in an inline template inside the form.

The publisher's action-xhr endpoint returns the following JSON responses:

On success:

{
  "name": "Jane Miller",
  "interests": [
    {"name": "Basketball"},
    {"name": "Swimming"},
    {"name": "Reading"}
  ],
  "email": "email@example.com"
}

On error:

{
  "name": "Jane Miller",
  "message": "The email (email@example.com) you used is already subscribed."
}

You can render the responses in a referenced template defined earlier in the document by using the template's id as the value of the template attribute, set on the elements with the submit-success and submit-error attributes.

<template type="amp-mustache" id="submit_success_template">
  Success! Thanks {{name}} for subscribing! Please make sure to check your email
{{email}} to confirm! After that we'll start sending you weekly articles on
{{#interests}}<b>{{name}}</b> {{/interests}}.
</template>
<template type="amp-mustache" id="submit_error_template">
  Oops! {{name}}, {{message}}.
</template>

<form ...>
  <fieldset>
    ...
  </fieldset>
  <div submit-success template="submit_success_template"></div>
  <div submit-error template="submit_error_template"></div>
</form>

See the full example here.

To render a successful response with data binding

  • Use the on attribute to bind the form submit-success attribute to AMP.setState().
  • Use the event property to capture the response data.
  • Add the state attribute to the desired element to bind the form response.

The following example demonstrates a form submit-success response with amp-bind:

<p [text]="'Thanks, ' + subscribe +'! You have successfully subscribed.'">
  Subscribe to our newsletter
</p>
<form
  method="post"
  action-xhr="/components/amp-form/submit-form-input-text-xhr"
  target="_top"
  on="submit-success: AMP.setState({'subscribe': event.response.name})"
>
  <div>
    <input type="text" name="name" placeholder="Name..." required />
    <input type="email" name="email" placeholder="Email..." required />
  </div>
  <input type="submit" value="Subscribe" />
</form>

When the form is submitted successfully it will return a JSON response similar to the following:

{
  "name": "Jane Miller",
  "email": "email@example.com"
}

Then amp-bind updates the <p> element's text to match the subscibe state:

...
<p [text]="'Thanks, ' + subscribe +'! You have successfully subscribed.'">
  Thanks Jane Miller! You have successfully subscribed.
</p>
...

Autoexpand

AMP Form provides an autoexpand attribute to <textarea> elements. This allows the textarea to expand and shrink to accomodate the user's rows of input, up to the field's maximum size. If the user manually resizes the field, the autoexpand behavior will be removed.

<textarea autoexpand></textarea>

Polyfills

The amp-form extension provide polyfills for behaviors and functionality missing from some browsers or being implemented in the next version of CSS.

Invalid submit blocking and validation message bubble

Browsers that use webkit-based engines currently (as of August 2016) do not support invalid form submissions. These include Safari on all platforms, and all iOS browsers. The amp-form extension polyfills this behavior to block any invalid submissions and shows validation message bubbles on invalid inputs.

User-interaction pseudo-classes

The :user-invalid and :user-valid pseudo classes are part of the future CSS Selectors 4 spec and are introduced to allow better hooks for styling invalid/valid fields based on a few criteria.

One of the main differences between :invalid and :user-invalid is when are they applied to the element. The :user-invalid class is applied after a significant interaction from the user with the field (e.g., the user types in a field, or blurs from the field).

The amp-form extension provides classes to polyfill these pseudo-classes. The amp-form extension also propagates these to the ancestor form. However, fieldset elements are only ever set to have class 'user-valid' to be consistent with browser behaviour.

<textarea> validation

Regular expression matching is a common validation feature supported natively on most input elements, except for <textarea>. We polyfill this functionality and support the pattern attribute on <textarea> elements.

Security considerations

Protecting against XSRF

In addition to following the details in the AMP CORS spec, please pay extra attention to the section on "Processing state changing requests" to protect against XSRF attacks where an attacker can execute unauthorized commands using the current user session without the user knowledge.

In general, keep in mind the following points when accepting input from the user:

  • Only use POST for state changing requests.
  • Use non-XHR GET for navigational purposes only (e.g. search).
    • Non-XHR GET requests are will not receive accurate origin/headers and backends won't be able to protect against XSRF with the above mechanism.
    • In general, use XHR/non-XHR GET requests for navigational or information retrieval only.
  • Non-XHR POST requests are not allowed in AMP documents. This is due to inconsistencies of setting Origin header on these requests across browsers, and the complications supporting it would introduce in protecting against XSRF. This might be reconsidered and introduced later — please file an issue if you think this is needed.

Attributes

action-xhr

Specifies a server endpoint to handle the form input and submit the form via XMLHttpRequest (XHR). An XHR request (sometimes called an AJAX request) is where the browser would make the request without a full load of the page or opening a new page. Browsers will send the request in the background using the Fetch API when available and fall back to XMLHttpRequest API for older browsers.

Your XHR endpoint must implement the requirements for CORS security.

This attribute is required for method=POST, and is optional for method=GET.

The value for action-xhr can be the same or a different endpoint than action and has the same action requirements above.

Other form attributes

All other form attributes are optional.

Actions

The amp-form element exposes the following actions.

submit

Allows you to trigger the form submission on a specific action, for example, tapping a link, or submitting a form on input change.

clear

Empties the values from each input in the form. This can allow users to quickly fill out forms a second time.

Events

Use amp-form events with the on attribute

The following example listens to both the submit-success and submit-error events and shows different lightboxes depending on the event:

<form
  ...
  on="submit-success:success-lightbox;submit-error:error-lightbox"
  ...
></form>

submit

The form is submitted and before the submission is complete.

submit-success

The form submission is done and the response is a success.

submit-error

The form submission is done and the response is an error.

Input events

AMP exposes change and input-debounced events on child <input> elements. This allows you to use the on attribute to execute an action on any element when an input value changes.

For example, a common use case is to submit a form on input change (selecting a radio button to answer a poll, choosing a language from a select input to translate a page, etc.).

<form id="myform"
    method="post"
    action-xhr="https://example.com/myform"    target="_blank">
    <fieldset>
      <label>
        <input name="answer1"
          value="Value 1"
          type="radio"
          on="change:myform.submit">Value 1
      </label>
      <label>
        <input name="answer1"
          value="Value 2"
          type="radio"
          on="change:myform.submit">Value 2
      </label>
    </fieldset>
  </form>
Otwórz ten fragment kodu w placu zabaw

See the full example here.

Styling

Classes and CSS hooks

The amp-form extension provides classes and CSS hooks for publishers to style their forms and inputs.

The following classes can be used to indicate the state of the form submission:

  • .amp-form-initial
  • .amp-form-verify
  • .amp-form-verify-error
  • .amp-form-submitting
  • .amp-form-submit-success
  • .amp-form-submit-error

The following classes are a polyfill for the user interaction pseudo classes:

  • .user-valid
  • .user-invalid

Publishers can use these classes to style their inputs and fieldsets to be responsive to user actions (e.g., highlighting an invalid input with a red border after user blurs from it).

See the full example here on using these.

Validation

See amp-form rules in the AMP validator specification.

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