Creating a form flow definition
A form flow definition is a JSON document that defines steps and which steps can be reached under what conditions when the current step is completed. Each step can have zero or more actions (e.g. retrieve external data) that trigger when the task is opened or completed. Depending on the type of step, the step can be handled in a different way. The way a form is handled can differ from a payment, for example.
For information on how to link a form flow definition to a task, see here.
Definitions
To create form flow definition, the following steps are necessary:
Create a form flow
.json
file under the following path:*/resources/config/form-flow/
.Add each individual step to the form flow definition, e.g.:
Add the next steps for each of the individual steps. This can be done through the
nextStep
property, which supports a single step, ornextSteps
, which supports multiple next steps. Each step should correspond to the key of another step defined in this form flow.
The
personalDetailsStep
is now followed by two other steps. This is only allowed when at least one of the two steps is conditional. The order of next step matters. The firstnextStep
withcondition
that is evaluated totrue
will be the next step. When all the conditions are evaluated tofalse
the next step will be the default step; which is the step without condition. If no next step is found, the form flow will end. The expression inside the condition is further explained here.
Configure the step type. Currently, the only step type supported is
form
, which requires adefinition
property to be set. This refers to the key of the form. For more information on step types, see hereWhich properties are required to be set depends on the step type.
Add triggers to steps where necessary (e.g. to store data externally). See below for more information.
Expressions
Form flow supports Spring Expression Language (SpEL) expressions to allow for more complex actions when a step is opened or completed. Expressions can be recognized by the surrounding ${ }
characters. The following additional properties are supported for steps:
onBack
. Triggers the expressions when navigating to the previous step, e.g. to remove data from a document.onOpen
. Triggers the expressions when the step is opened, e.g. to retrieve external data.onComplete
. Triggers the expressions when the step is complete, e.g. to store the results in a document.
Each of these properties supports more than one expression, e.g. when a step is opened, external data from more than one source is retrieved. These expressions are evaluated in order.
Valtimo provides access to certain variables in the SpEL context, e.g. what the current step is. Which properties are available can be found here.
Examples
The step condition below will only go to the step loanApprovedStep
when a user has entered an age that is above 21:
The onOpen
expression below will call an external @FormFlowBean
called someService
to retrieve some data. The additionalProperties
is a form flow parameter:
The onComplete
expressions below will change the data submitted by the user. It adds a fullName
and removes the firstName
and lastName
:
The onOpen
expressions delete any existing submission data of the step, before opening the form flow:
An example of a complete form flow:
By default, SpEL allows access to every Spring bean from inside expressions. For security reasons, this has been changed to a whitelist instead. More information on how to whitelist Spring beans is available here and more information on SpEL can be found here.
Breadcrumbs
If the feature toggle enableFormFlowBreadCrumbs
is enabled, users will see a new breadcrumb trail on top of every form flow. This allows a user to quickly navigate between the different steps of the form flow.
Every form flow step has an optional field called title
which is shown in the example below. This field is used to display the title of the step inside the breadcrumb trail. If the title field is left empty, the breadcrumb trail will try to fill the title field by looking for existing translations inside the en.json
or the nl.json
files, that can be found in the frontend code.
The breadcrumb trail uses a simple way to predict which breadcrumbs to display in all future steps. The breadcrumb trail takes the first step inside the nextSteps
field to determine all future steps. In the example below, the breadcrumb trail would be: 1. Personal details -> 2. Loan approved
because the loanApprovedStep
is the first step in the nextSteps
field.
Last updated