Buy Access to Course
24.

Data Transformer

Share this awesome video!

|

Keep on Learning!

With a Subscription, click any sentence in the script to jump to that part of the video!

Login Subscribe

We built a custom field type called UserSelectTextType and we're already using it for the author field. That's cool, except, thanks to getParent(), it's really just a TextType in disguise!

Internally, TextType basically has no data transformer: it takes whatever value is on the object and tries to print it as the value for the HTML input! For the author field, it means that it's trying to echo that property's value: an entire User object! Thanks to the __toString() method in that class, this prints the first name.

Let's remove that and see what happens. Refresh! Woohoo! A big ol' error:

Object of class User could not be converted to string

More importantly, even if we put this back, yes, the form would render. But when we submitted it, we would just get a different huge error: the form would try to take the submitted string and pass that to setAuthor().

To fix this, our field needs a data transformer: something that's capable of taking the User object and rendering its email field. And on submit, transforming that email string back into a User object.

Creating the Data Transformer

Here's how it works: in the Form/ directory, create a new DataTransformer/ directory, but, as usual, the location of the new class won't matter. Then add a new class: EmailToUserTransformer.

The only rule for a data transformer is that it needs to implement a DataTransformerInterface. I'll go to the Code -> Generate menu, or Command+N on a Mac, select "Implement Methods" and choose the two from that interface.

I love data transformers! Let's add some debug code in each method so we can see when they're called and what this value looks like. So dd('transform', $value) and dd('reverse transform', $value).

// ... lines 1 - 7
class EmailToUserTransformer implements DataTransformerInterface
{
public function transform($value)
{
dd('transform', $value);
}
public function reverseTransform($value)
{
dd('reverse transform', $value);
}
}

To make UserSelectTextType use this, head back to that class, go to the Code -> Generate menu again, or Command + N on a Mac, and override one more method: buildForm().

Hey! We know this method! This is is the method that we override in our normal form type classes: it's where we add the fields! It turns out that there are a few other things that you can do with this $builder object: one of them is $builder->addModelTransformer(). Pass this a new EmailToUserTransformer().

22 lines | src/Form/UserSelectTextType.php
// ... lines 1 - 9
class UserSelectTextType extends AbstractType
{
public function buildForm(FormBuilderInterface $builder, array $options)
{
$builder->addModelTransformer(new EmailToUserTransformer());
}
// ... lines 16 - 20
}

The transform() Method

Let's try it! I'll hit enter on the URL in my browser to re-render the form with a GET request. And... boom! We hit the transform() method! And the value is our User object.

This is awesome! That's the whole point of transform()! This method is called. when the form is rendering: it takes the raw data for a field - in our case the User object that lives on the author property - and our job is to transform that into a representation that can be used for the form field. In other words, the email string.

First, if null is the value, just return an empty string. Next, let's add a sanity check: if (!$value instanceof User), then we, the developer, are trying to do something crazy. Throw a new LogicException() that says:

The UserSelectTextType can only be used with User objects.

Finally, at the bottom, so nice, return $value - which we now know is a User object ->getEmail().

// ... lines 1 - 8
class EmailToUserTransformer implements DataTransformerInterface
{
public function transform($value)
{
if (null === $value) {
return '';
}
if (!$value instanceof User) {
throw new \LogicException('The UserSelectTextType can only be used with User objects');
}
return $value->getEmail();
}
// ... lines 23 - 27
}

Let's rock! Move over, refresh and.... hello email address!

The reverseTransform() Method

Now, let's submit this. Boom! This time, we hit reverseTransform() and its data is the literal string email address. Our job is to use that to query for a User object and return it. And to do that, this class needs our UserRepository.

Time for some dependency injection! Add a constructor with UserRepository $userRepository. I'll hit alt+enter and select "Initialize Fields" to create that property and set it.

// ... lines 1 - 9
class EmailToUserTransformer implements DataTransformerInterface
{
private $userRepository;
public function __construct(UserRepository $userRepository)
{
$this->userRepository = $userRepository;
}
// ... lines 18 - 41
}

Normally... that's all we would need to do: we could instantly use that property below. But... this object is not instantiated by Symfony's container. So, we don't get our cool autowiring magic. Nope, in this case, we are creating this object ourselves! And so, we are responsible for passing it whatever it needs.

It's no big deal, but, we do have some more work. In the field type class, add an identical __construct() method with the same UserRepository argument. Hit Alt+Enter again to initialize that field. The form type classes are services, so autowiring will work here.

30 lines | src/Form/UserSelectTextType.php
// ... lines 1 - 10
class UserSelectTextType extends AbstractType
{
private $userRepository;
public function __construct(UserRepository $userRepository)
{
$this->userRepository = $userRepository;
}
// ... lines 19 - 28
}

Thanks to that, in buildForm() pass $this->userRepository manually into EmailToUserTransformer.

30 lines | src/Form/UserSelectTextType.php
// ... lines 1 - 19
public function buildForm(FormBuilderInterface $builder, array $options)
{
$builder->addModelTransformer(new EmailToUserTransformer($this->userRepository));
}
// ... lines 24 - 30

Back in reverseTransform(), let's get to work: $user = $this->userRepository and use the findOneBy() method to query for email set to $value. If there is not a user with that email, throw a new TransformationFailedException(). This is important - and its use statement was even pre-added when we implemented the interface. Inside, say:

No user found with email %s

and pass the value. At the bottom, return $user.

// ... lines 1 - 9
class EmailToUserTransformer implements DataTransformerInterface
{
// ... lines 12 - 31
public function reverseTransform($value)
{
$user = $this->userRepository->findOneBy(['email' => $value]);
if (!$user) {
throw new TransformationFailedException(sprintf('No user found with email "%s"', $value));
}
return $user;
}
}

The TransformationFailedException is special: when this is thrown, it's a signal that there is a validation error.

Check it out: find your browser and refresh to resubmit that form. Cool - it looks like it worked. Try a different email: spacebar3@example.com and submit! Nice! If I click enter on the address to get a fresh load... yep! It definitely saved!

But now, try an email that does not exist, like spacebar300@example.com. Submit and... validation error! That comes from our data transformer. This TransformationFailedException causes a validation error. Not the type of validation errors that we get from our annotations - like @Assert\Email() or @NotBlank(). Nope: this is what I referred to early as "sanity" validation: validation that is built right into the form field itself.

We saw this in action back when we were using the EntityType for the author field: if we hacked the HTML and changed the value attribute of an option to a non-existent id, we got a sanity validation error message.

Next: let's see how we can customize this error and learn to do a few other fancy things to make our custom field more flexible.