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Forms Laravel Package

filament/forms

Filament Forms is a Laravel package for building powerful, reactive admin forms with a fluent, component-based API. Create fields, layouts, validation, conditional logic, and dynamic interactions quickly, with tight Livewire integration and great DX for panels and apps.

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title: Text input

import Aside from "@components/Aside.astro" import AutoScreenshot from "@components/AutoScreenshot.astro" import UtilityInjection from "@components/UtilityInjection.astro"

Introduction

The text input allows you to interact with a string:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('name')

Setting the HTML input type

You may set the type of string using a set of methods. Some, such as email(), also provide validation:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('text')
    ->email() // or
    ->numeric() // or
    ->integer() // or
    ->password() // or
    ->tel() // or
    ->url()

You may instead use the type() method to pass another HTML input type:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('backgroundColor')
    ->type('color')

The individual type methods also allow you to pass in a boolean value to control if the field should be that or not:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('text')
    ->email(FeatureFlag::active()) // or
    ->numeric(FeatureFlag::active()) // or
    ->integer(FeatureFlag::active()) // or
    ->password(FeatureFlag::active()) // or
    ->tel(FeatureFlag::active()) // or
    ->url(FeatureFlag::active())

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value these methods also accept a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Setting the HTML input mode

You may set the inputmode attribute of the input using the inputMode() method:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('text')
    ->numeric()
    ->inputMode('decimal')

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the inputMode() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Setting the numeric step

You may set the step attribute of the input using the step() method:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('number')
    ->numeric()
    ->step(100)

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the step() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Autocompleting text

You may allow the text to be autocompleted by the browser using the autocomplete() method:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('password')
    ->password()
    ->autocomplete('new-password')

As a shortcut for autocomplete="off", you may use autocomplete(false):

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('password')
    ->password()
    ->autocomplete(false)

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the autocomplete() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

For more complex autocomplete options, text inputs also support datalists.

Autocompleting text with a datalist

You may specify datalist options for a text input using the datalist() method:

TextInput::make('manufacturer')
    ->datalist([
        'BMW',
        'Ford',
        'Mercedes-Benz',
        'Porsche',
        'Toyota',
        'Volkswagen',
    ])

Datalists provide autocomplete options to users when they use a text input. However, these are purely recommendations, and the user is still able to type any value into the input. If you're looking to strictly limit users to a set of predefined options, check out the select field.

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the datalist() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Autocapitalizing text

You may allow the text to be autocapitalized by the browser using the autocapitalize() method:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('name')
    ->autocapitalize('words')

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the autocapitalize() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Adding affix text aside the field

You may place text before and after the input using the prefix() and suffix() methods:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('domain')
    ->prefix('https://')
    ->suffix('.com')

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing static values, the prefix() and suffix() methods also accept a function to dynamically calculate them. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Using icons as affixes

You may place an icon before and after the input using the prefixIcon() and suffixIcon() methods:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;
use Filament\Support\Icons\Heroicon;

TextInput::make('domain')
    ->url()
    ->suffixIcon(Heroicon::GlobeAlt)

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing static values, the prefixIcon() and suffixIcon() methods also accept a function to dynamically calculate them. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Setting the affix icon's color

Affix icons are gray by default, but you may set a different color using the prefixIconColor() and suffixIconColor() methods:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;
use Filament\Support\Icons\Heroicon;

TextInput::make('domain')
    ->url()
    ->suffixIcon(Heroicon::CheckCircle)
    ->suffixIconColor('success')

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing static values, the prefixIconColor() and suffixIconColor() methods also accept a function to dynamically calculate them. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Using actions as affixes

You may place an action before and after the input using the prefixAction() and suffixAction() methods:

use Filament\Actions\Action;
use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;
use Filament\Support\Icons\Heroicon;

TextInput::make('cost')
    ->prefix('€')
    ->suffixAction(
        Action::make('copyCostToPrice')
            ->icon(Heroicon::Clipboard),
    )

Revealable password inputs

When using password(), you can also make the input revealable(), so that the user can see a plain text version of the password they're typing by clicking a button:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('password')
    ->password()
    ->revealable()

Optionally, you may pass a boolean value to control if the input should be revealable or not:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('password')
    ->password()
    ->revealable(FeatureFlag::active())

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the revealable() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Allowing the text to be copied to the clipboard

You may make the text copyable, such that clicking on a button next to the input copies the text to the clipboard, and optionally specify a custom confirmation message and duration in milliseconds:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('apiKey')
    ->label('API key')
    ->copyable(copyMessage: 'Copied!', copyMessageDuration: 1500)

Optionally, you may pass a boolean value to control if the text should be copyable or not:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('apiKey')
    ->label('API key')
    ->copyable(FeatureFlag::active())

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing static values, the copyable() method parameters also accept functions to dynamically calculate them. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Input masking

Input masking is the practice of defining a format that the input value must conform to.

In Filament, you may use the mask() method to configure an Alpine.js mask:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('birthday')
    ->mask('99/99/9999')
    ->placeholder('MM/DD/YYYY')

To use a dynamic mask, wrap the JavaScript in a RawJs object:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;
use Filament\Support\RawJs;

TextInput::make('cardNumber')
    ->mask(RawJs::make(<<<'JS'
        $input.startsWith('34') || $input.startsWith('37') ? '9999 999999 99999' : '9999 9999 9999 9999'
    JS))

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the mask() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Alpine.js will send the entire masked value to the server, so you may need to strip certain characters from the state before validating the field and saving it. You can do this with the stripCharacters() method, passing in a character or an array of characters to remove from the masked value:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;
use Filament\Support\RawJs;

TextInput::make('amount')
    ->mask(RawJs::make('$money($input)'))
    ->stripCharacters(',')
    ->numeric()

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the stripCharacters() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Trimming whitespace

You can automatically trim whitespace from the beginning and end of the input value using the trim() method:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('name')
    ->trim()

You may want to enable trimming globally for all text inputs, similar to Laravel's TrimStrings middleware. You can do this in a service provider using the configureUsing() method:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::configureUsing(function (TextInput $component): void {
    $component->trim();
});

Making the field read-only

Not to be confused with disabling the field, you may make the field "read-only" using the readOnly() method:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('name')
    ->readOnly()

There are a few differences, compared to disabled():

  • When using readOnly(), the field will still be sent to the server when the form is submitted. It can be mutated with the browser console, or via JavaScript. You can use saved(false) to prevent this.
  • There are no styling changes, such as less opacity, when using readOnly().
  • The field is still focusable when using readOnly().

Optionally, you may pass a boolean value to control if the field should be read-only or not:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('name')
    ->readOnly(FeatureFlag::active())

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the readOnly() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Text input validation

As well as all rules listed on the validation page, there are additional rules that are specific to text inputs.

Length validation

You may limit the length of the input by setting the minLength() and maxLength() methods. These methods add both frontend and backend validation:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('name')
    ->minLength(2)
    ->maxLength(255)

You can also specify the exact length of the input by setting the length(). This method adds both frontend and backend validation:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('code')
    ->length(8)

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing static values, the minLength(), maxLength() and length() methods also accept a function to dynamically calculate them. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Size validation

You may validate the minimum and maximum value of a numeric input by setting the minValue() and maxValue() methods:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('number')
    ->numeric()
    ->minValue(1)
    ->maxValue(100)

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing static values, the minValue() and maxValue() methods also accept a function to dynamically calculate them. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

Phone number validation

When using a tel() field, the value will be validated using: /^[+]*[(]{0,1}[0-9]{1,4}[)]{0,1}[-\s\.\/0-9]*$/.

If you wish to change that, then you can use the telRegex() method:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::make('phone')
    ->tel()
    ->telRegex('/^[+]*[(]{0,1}[0-9]{1,4}[)]{0,1}[-\s\.\/0-9]*$/')

Alternatively, to customize the telRegex() across all fields, use a service provider:

use Filament\Forms\Components\TextInput;

TextInput::configureUsing(function (TextInput $component): void {
    $component->telRegex('/^[+]*[(]{0,1}[0-9]{1,4}[)]{0,1}[-\s\.\/0-9]*$/');
});

<UtilityInjection set="formFields" version="5.x">As well as allowing a static value, the telRegex() method also accepts a function to dynamically calculate it. You can inject various utilities into the function as parameters.</UtilityInjection>

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